It was between four and five hundred
years ago that Venice sat most proudly on her throne
as Queen of the Sea. She had the greatest fleet
in all the Mediterranean. She bought and sold
more than any other nation. She had withstood
the shock of battle and conquered all her foes, and
now she had time to deck herself with all the beauty
which art and wealth could produce.
The merchants of Venice sailed to
every port and carried with them wonderful shiploads
of goods, for which their city was famous silks,
velvets, lace, and rich brocades. The secret of
the marvellous Tyrian dyes had been discovered by
her people, and there were many dyers in Venice who
were specially famous for the purple dye of Tyre, which
was thought to be the most beautiful in all the world.
Then too they had learned the art of blowing glass
into fairy-like forms, as delicate and light as a
bubble, catching in it every shade of colour, and twisting
it into a hundred exquisite shapes. Truly there
had never been a richer or more beautiful city than
this Queen of the Sea.
It was just when the glory of Venice
was at its highest that Art too reached its height,
and Giorgione and Titian began to paint the walls
of her palaces and the altarpieces of her churches.
In the very centre of the city where
the poorer Venetians had their houses, there lived
about this time a man called Battista Robusti who
was a dyer, or ‘tintore,’ as he is
called in Italy. It was his little son Jacopo
who afterwards became such a famous artist. His
grand-sounding name ‘Tintoretto’ means
nothing but ‘the little dyer,’ and it
was given to him because of his father’s trade.
Tintoretto must have been brought
up in the midst of gorgeous colours. Not only
did he see the wonderful changing tints of the outside
world, but in his father’s workshop he must
often have watched the rich Venetian stuffs lifted
from the dye vats, heavy with the crimson and purple
shades for which Venice was famous. Perhaps all
this glowing colour wearied his young eyes, for when
he grew to be a man his pictures show that he loved
solemn and dark tones, though he could also paint
the most brilliant colours when he chose.
Of course, the boy Tintoretto began
by painting the walls of his father’s house,
as soon as he was old enough to learn the use of dyes
and paints. Even if he had not had in him the
artist soul, he could scarcely have resisted the temptation
to spread those lovely colours on the smooth white
walls. Any child would have done the same, but
Tintoretto’s mischievous fingers already showed
signs of talent, and his father, instead of scolding
him for wasting colours and spoiling the walls, encouraged
him to go on with his pictures.
As the boy grew older, his great delight
was to wander about the city and watch the men at
work building new palaces. But especially did
he linger near those walls which Titian and Giorgione
were covering with their wonderful frescoes.
High on the scaffolding he would see the painters
at work, and as he watched the boy would build castles
in the air, and dream dreams of a time when he too
would be a master-painter, and be bidden by Venice
to decorate her walls.
To Tintoretto’s mind Titian
was the greatest man in all the world, and to be taught
by him the greatest honour that heart could wish.
So it was perhaps the happiest day in all his life
when his father decided to take him to Titian’s
studio and ask the master to receive him as a pupil.
But the happiness lasted but a very
short time. Titian did not approve of the boy’s
work, and refused to keep him in the studio; so poor,
disappointed Tintoretto went home again, and felt as
if all sunshine and hope had gone for ever from his
life. It was a bitter disappointment to his father
and mother too, for they had set their hearts on the
boy becoming an artist. But in spite of all this,
Tintoretto did not lose heart or give up his dreams.
He worked on by himself in his own way, and Titian’s
paintings taught him many things even though the master
himself refused to help him. Then too he saw
some work of the great Michelangelo, and learned many
a lesson from that. Thenceforward his highest
ideal was always ’the drawing of Michelangelo
and the colour of Titian.
The young artist lived in a poor,
bare room, and most of his money went in the buying
of little pieces of old sculpture or casts. He
had a very curious way of working the designs for
his pictures. Instead of drawing many sketches,
he made little wax models of figures and arranged them
inside a cardboard or wooden box in which there was
a hole to admit a lighted candle. So, besides
the grouping of the figures, he could also arrange
the light and shade.
But, though he worked hard, fame was
long in coming to Tintoretto. People did not
understand his way of painting. It was not after
the manner of any of the great artists, and they were
rather afraid of his bold, furious-looking work.
Nevertheless Tintoretto worked steadily
on, always hoping, and whenever there was a chance
of doing any work, even without receiving payment
for it, he seized it eagerly.
It happened just then that the young
Venetian artists had agreed to have a show of their
paintings, and had hired a room for the exhibition
in the Merceria, the busiest part of Venice.
Tintoretto was very glad of the chance
of showing his work, so he sent in a portrait of himself
and also one of his brother. As soon as these
pictures were seen people began to take more notice
of the clever young painter, and even Titian allowed
that his work was good. His portraits were always
fresh and life-like, and he drew with a bold strong
touch, as you will see if you look at the drawing
I have shown you the head of a Venetian
boy, such as Tintoretto met daily among the fisher-folk
of Venice.
From that time Fortune began to smile
on Tintoretto. Little by little work began to
come in. He was asked to paint altarpieces for
the churches, and even at last, when his name became
famous, he was invited to work upon the walls of the
Ducal Palace, the highest honour which a Venetian
painter could hope to win.
The days of the poor, bare studio,
and lonely, sad life were ended now. Tintoretto
had no longer to struggle with poverty and neglect.
His house was a beautiful palace looking over the
lagoon towards Murano, and he had married the daughter
of a Venetian noble, and lived a happy, contented
life. Children’s voices made gay music in
his home, and the pattering of little feet broke the
silence of his studio. Fame had come to him too.
His work might be strange but it was very wonderful,
and Venice was proud of her new painter. His
great stormy pictures had earned for him the name
off ‘the furious painter,’ and the world
began to acknowledge his greatness.
But the real sunshine of his life
was his little daughter Marietta. As soon as
she learned to walk she found her way to her father’s
studio, and until she was fifteen years old she was
always with him and helped him as if she had been
one of his pupils. She was dressed too as a boy,
and visitors to the studio never guessed that the clever,
handsome boy was really the painter’s daughter.
There were many great schools in Venice
at that time, and there was much work to be done in
decorating their walls with paintings. A school
was not really a place of education, but a society
of people who joined themselves together in charity
to nurse the sick, bury the dead, and release any
prisoners who had been taken captive. One of the
greatest of the schools was the ‘Scuola de San
Rocco,’ and this was given into the hands of
Tintoretto, who covered the walls with his paintings,
leaving but little room for other artists.
But it is in the Ducal Palace that
the master’s most famous work is seen.
There, covering the entire side of the great hall,
hangs his ‘Paradiso,’ the largest oil
painting in the world.
At first it seems but a gloomy picture
of Paradise. It is so vast, and such hundreds
of figures are crowded together, and the colour is
dark and sombre. There is none of that swinging
of golden censers by white-robed angels, none of the
pure glad colouring of spring flowers which makes
us love the Paradise of Fra Angelico.
But if we stand long enough before
it a great awe steals over us, and we forget to look
for bright colours and gentle angel faces, for the
figures surging upwards are very real and human, and
the Paradise into which we gaze seems to reveal to
our eyes the very place where we ourselves shall stand
one day.
At the time when Tintoretto was painting
his ‘Paradiso,’ his little daughter Marietta
had grown to be a woman, and her painting too had
become famous. She was invited to the courts of
Germany and Spain to paint the portraits of the King
and Emperor, but she refused to leave Venice and her
beloved father. Even when she married Mario, the
jeweller, she did not go far from home, and Tintoretto
grew every year fonder and prouder of his clever and
beautiful daughter. Not only could she paint,
but she played and sang most wonderfully, and became
a great favourite among the music-loving Venetians.
But this happiness soon came to an
end, for Marietta died suddenly in the midst of her
happy life.
Nothing could comfort Tintoretto for
the loss of his daughter. She was buried in the
church of Santa Maria dell’ Orto, and there he
ordered another place to be prepared that he might
be buried at her side. It seemed, indeed, as
if he could not live without her, for it was not long
before he passed away. The last great stormy picture
of ’the furious painter’ was finished,
and all Venice mourned as they laid him to rest beside
the daughter he had loved so well.