Feast of St. Gregory the Great
The Feast of St. Gregory the Great, signed and dated 1540, together on the panel with Jesus in the House of Martha and Mary, placed in this same hall at the other end of the wall, plus a third lost painting, are all part of the vast project to decorate the refectory of the Olivetan monastery of San Michele in Bosco in Bologna, commissioned to Giorgio Vasari in 1539.
The artists of the Bologna school, who had long been involved in decorating the monastery, fearing the dangerous Tuscan competition, did not receive the young man from Arezzo in Bologna with enthusiasm. However, he did not stay in the city for long: the following year, to the great relief of everyone, Vasari went home.
In the crowded and multi-coloured Feast of St. Gregory the Great, the dignified setting in a monumental and solemn building provides the background for an impressive parade of portraits. The artist managed to pay tribute to the memory of two illustrious figures who had recently passed away: Pope Clement VII, who, in 1530, had crowned Charles V Emperor in the basilica of San Petronio, is portrayed in the guise of St. Gregory, while Duke Alessandro de’ Medici, a great patron of Vasari, is represented at his back leaning against the chair.
The scene alludes to an episode in the life of Pope Gregory the Great. Every day the pope personally served twelve poor people who had been invited to his table, in memory of the Last Supper; one day, a thirteenth guest miraculously joined the twelve guests, and revealed himself to be Jesus. In the painting of Jesus in the House of Martha and Mary, the story from the Gospels is depicted in the foreground, inside the vast setting of a noble palace, along whose walls a grand staircase runs. Looking down from this staircase are the many people involved in preparing the lunch.
Mary, the emblem of the contemplative life, is seated at Jesus's feet and listening to him talk, while Martha, symbol of an industrious life, is working at preparing lunch.
Vasari’s signature, visible on Christ’s chair, curiously, is in Greek letters: the idea was probably influenced by the scholar and the painter's personal friend, Andrea Alciati, at the time, a reader at the studio in Bologna.
In both panels, Vasari created a scenic and theatrical space, where influences from the school of Raphael, with whom he had became acquainted in Rome, and memories of Michelangelo, mingle together, like the robust anatomy of the diner who has his back to us in the foreground of the Feast of St. Gregory.
Parmigianino’s influence, in particular in the altarpiece with St. Margaret, which can be seen in room 18, is recognizable in the scene with Jesus in the house of Martha and Mary, both in the clothing and Mary’s elaborate hairstyle, as well as Christ's elegant pose in profile. In the context of the refectory of San Michele, the theme of hospitality, illustrated in the panels, was intended to celebrate brotherly love, a characteristic of the Olivetan Benedictine order, whose rule required that they received all guests as if they were the Christ himself.
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