Ecstasy of St. Theresa by Bernini and The Swing by Fragonard

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The seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in Europe brought about sincere and contrasting artistic movements characterized by both the Baroque and Rococo Styles. With two distinct epochs we find one overly ornate with dramatic tendencies, while the other expressed a more playful, light hearted sensibility within the elaborate landscape. Ecstasy of St. Theresa by Bernini created during the High Roman Baroque period embodies both great similarities and contradictions to Rococo’s Jean-Honoré Fragonard’s, The Swing in composition and theme. Both the Baroque and Rococo masterpieces were influenced by the cultural and political temperaments of their time and space.

The Baroque aesthetic was serious, while the Rococo style featured a lot of fantasy.
In Baroque art, bold contrasts of bright light and dark shadows were used in the form of tenebrism. However, the lighting in Rococo art works was applied to create warmth and intimacy. Baroque color palettes were dynamic and rich, while the Rococo favored ubiquitous golds and pastels. The Ecstasy of St. Theresa, by Bernini was housed in the Cornaro Chapel, Santa Maria della Vittoria in Rome, where Bernini also designed the stucco and paint of the exterior. Bernini created a total environment and setting for the subject matter of Theresa that truly captures the viewer's attention. He used strong contour lines and built exquisite texture in the polished marble medium. On both sides of the sculpture, there are relief sculptures illustrating the male members of the Cornaro family, who commissioned the work. Gesamtkunstwerk is the german term for a "total work of art" that employs more than one medium such as paint and sculpture, which is what Bernini mastered here when the term was coined. Ther...

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...de,“of the moment”. Rococo was known as the enlightenment when the divine right of kings was overturned, and these changing times were reflected in the themes of art. Such themes were private relationships free from royal constraints, along with moods of pleasure, sensuality, and romance. Intimate conversations and gestures created during the Rococo replaced the regal and grandiose displays of the Baroque. In Fragonard’s The Swing, the theme is of two lovers who have conspired to get an older gentleman to push the young woman in the swing as her lover lies in the bushes beneath her. The not so disguised element of this painting is that as she goes up in the air she can part her legs so that her lover can see up her skirt. Fragonard’s The Swing is a fine example of the lifestyle during the Rococo period, which differed from the religiosity and morality of the Baroque.

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