The Last Supper

This is Holy Week in the Christian calendar.  Today is Maudy Thursday, and tomorrow is Good Friday.  It seems an appropriate time to talk about Leonardo Da Vinci’s fresco, The Last Supper.

The Last Supper

Here are some surprising things I learned about The Last Supper when The Art Caravan visited Milan and had a look…..

*It’s a fresco, not a painting.  (In my mind’s eye, I expected a “Paint-by-Numbers” sized oil, hanging on a wall.)

*It’s painted on the (former) refectory wall of Santa Maria delle Grazie, a 15th century church and Dominican convent.  Yes!  That’s the top of a doorframe butting into the tablecloth under the centre figure of Jesus.

*Leonardo da Vinci used an experimental technique to paint the fresco, and it started deteriorating twenty years after its completion.

*The colours are muted; most reproductions don’t reflect the deterioration of the work.

*It’s been restored many times, some attempts more successful, and more sensitive, than others.  (Pietro Marani, a curator and Renaissance scholar expresses this graciously:  “The beautiful heads of Bartholomew and James the Lesser–which recall the busts of antiquity–can now vaunt their original design and no small part of their former beauty, a perfect counterpoint to that of Matthew.”)

*Santa Maria delle Grazie is beautiful, too, and worth a visit. It’s a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Travel tip  (courtesy of Rick Steves):
When you plan to visit Milan and see The Last Supper (of course you will!) you MUST have reservations. You can (theoretically) purchase tickets on-line, but the website (the last time I tried) didn’t work all that well.  It’s better to pay for a walking tour that guarantees your admission.

 

 

4 thoughts on “The Last Supper

  1. Ruth

    I have forwarded your entry today to good friends leaving for Italy and an extensive cruise. While they have visited Europe in the past, this time they are celebrating their wedding anniversary and they love the stories that accompany the sights and art they are viewing. I, too, appreciate information about details otherwise overlooked. The story is in the details. I wonder who wrote that! Once again, you are illuminating. Thank you, Terry.

    Reply

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