THE CHRISTMAS CANVAS: ‘The Visitation’ by Piero di Cosimo
One of the most intriguing artists of Italian Renaissance, Piero di Cosimo (1462 – 1522) was known for the ‘strangeness of his brain.’ From Vasari, the biographer, we learn that Piero was terrified of lighting and thunder; he was frugal enough to cook 50 eggs at a time in order to save fuel; he often got enraged by flies and shadows and could not bear ‘the crying of children, the coughing of men and the chanting of friars’. The greatness of his intellect was to be revered and yet for his uncouth ways, he was regarded as a madman.
The madness of his peculiar personality creeps into his curious paintings delivering a unique and fascinating work of art. Gifted with eccentricity, he converts the ordinary into extraordinary while expressing the extraordinary through little nods of mundane life. He leaves the spectator with a zest of exploring the rich details of his painting without focusing on just the primary subject. Nay, your eyes cannot rest on the protagonist. If they do, you are simply missing out on something brilliantly bizarre.
This Christmas let’s pry into one of his master works, ‘The Visitation.’
Adhering to the Gospel, Piero dramatizes the meeting between two expectant mothers who have miraculously conceived. The young Virgin reaches out to embrace her elderly cousin. In a climatic blurt awakened by the leap of the unborn Baptist, Elizabeth exclaims ‘Blessed are you among women and blessed is the fruit of your womb!’ As their gaze and hands affectionately meet, it’s the encounter of the divine with the human.
The intimacy of the moment is interrupted by the howling and wailing of the Massacre of the Innocents. As seen at the right, beneath bare branches, petrified mothers grasp their little ones in sheer defence; a toddler precariously clings to the edge while a lamb scurries off the slope. A Gospel click indeed, the eluding lamb recalls the Holy Family’s Escape to Egypt. A glance above will reveal to us the quirkiness of the narrative. Prosaic men and women happily gaze outside their windows as if regarding a theatrical play. To add to this droll is a pet monkey seen whisking along the house pipe.

Fascinating and the detailed explanation about the painting. Just Vow. Thank you