{"id":3336,"date":"2017-03-01T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2017-02-28T23:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/salvator-rosas-democritus-and-diogenes-in-copenhagen\/"},"modified":"2024-03-20T11:31:37","modified_gmt":"2024-03-20T10:31:37","slug":"salvator-rosas-democritus-and-diogenes-in-copenhagen","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/salvator-rosas-democritus-and-diogenes-in-copenhagen\/","title":{"rendered":"Salvator Rosa\u2019s Democritus and Diogenes in Copenhagen"},"content":{"rendered":"<blockquote><p>Ma nell\u2019 antichit\u00e0 non vo\u2019 ingolfarmi.<\/p>\n<p>Mira, come danno aura al Buonarruoti<\/p>\n<p>Non men le carte, che le tele, e I marmi.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Se i libri del Vasari osservi e noti,<\/p>\n<p>Vedrai che de\u2019 pittori i pi\u00f9 discreti<\/p>\n<p>Son per la poesia celebri e noti.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>E non solo I pittori eran poeti,<\/p>\n<p>Ma filosofi grandi, e fur demoni<\/p>\n<p>Nel cercar di Natura I gran segreti.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>(from Salvator Rosa\u2019s satire L\u2019Invidia)<sup id=\"footnote-1\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"1\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nSalvator Rosa: <em>Satire di Salvator Rosa. Ristampate a spese di G. Balcetti<\/em>, Londra 1791, ECCO Print Editions (reproduction after British Library), Literature and Language, Hampshire 2016, pp. 181&amp;ndash;182.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">1<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<h2>Prologue<\/h2>\n<p>One of Erik Zahle\u2019s feats as curator at the National Gallery of Denmark was the acquisition, in 1936, of Salvator Rosa\u2019s monumental pendants depicting ancient philosophers.<sup id=\"footnote-2\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"2\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nThe paintings were bought form the Copenhagen art dealer Tj\u00f8rnelund &amp;amp; Rossum; concerning their acquisition and genesis, see Erik Zahle: &amp;ldquo;Tilv\u00e6kst af italiensk barok&amp;rdquo;, <em>Kunstmuseets Aarsskrift 1937<\/em>, pp. 145-155; Harald Olsen:&amp;nbsp;<em>Italian Paintings and Sculpture in Denmark<\/em>, Munksgaard, Copenhagen 1961, pp. 85-86.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">2<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Salvator Rosa (1615\u201373) was in his mid-thirties when he set out to paint <em>Democritus in Meditation<\/em> (1650\u201351) and <em>Diogenes casting away\u00a0his bowl <\/em>\u00a0(1651\u201352). <strong>[figs. 1-2]<\/strong> The decision to paint not just one, but two paintings on this vast scale should be seen in light of the fact that at this point Salvator Rosa had just returned to Rome after a decade of working in Florence. The two paintings, hereinafter also known as the pendants, were intended to call attention to his ability as a history painter, attracting clients to his newly established business. As a young artist Salvator Rosa specialised in battle scenes and landscapes inspired by the wild countryside around Naples, but he wished to be known as a history painter.<sup id=\"footnote-3\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"3\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nHelen Langdon, Xavier Salomon og Caterina Volpi:&amp;nbsp;<em>Salvator Rosa<\/em>, exhibition catalogue, the Dulwich Picture Gallery, London &amp;amp; Kimbell Art Museum, Paul Holberton, Fort Worth, Texas 2010. See in particular Helen Langdon: &amp;ldquo;The Art and Life of Salvator Rosa&amp;rdquo;, pp. 11-49 and Xavier F. Salomon: &amp;ldquo;Ho Fatto Spiritar Roma&amp;rdquo;, pp. 74-99, in particular pp. 82-85. The exhibition catalogue is hereinafter referred to as &amp;rdquo;London &amp;amp; Fort Worth 2010&amp;rdquo;.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">3<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>I shall read and interpret the pendants in the light of a range of seventeenth-century art theoretical concepts and their interrelationships. This will include the concepts of <em>virt\u00fa<\/em> (virtue), the melancholic temperament, and genius as seen in relation to the sublime. The Baroque era\u2019s understanding of the sublime is characterised by its ethical dimension, for the meaning of that concept has shifted and changed over time.<sup id=\"footnote-4\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"4\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nTimothy M. Costelloe, ed.: <em>The Sublime from Antiquity to the Present<\/em>, Cambridge University Press 2012, pp. 1-7.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">4<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In antiquity and in the Baroque era the sublime was framed by the discipline of rhetoric. Scholars and artists would read Longinus\u2019s treatise on the sublime, <em>Per\u00ec H\u00fdpsous<\/em>, (<em>On the Sublime<\/em>), which was edited as a printed book for the first time in 1554 in Greek, 1566 in Latin and in 1639 in Italian.<sup id=\"footnote-5\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"5\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nDietmar Till: <em>Das Doppelte Erhabene. Eine Argumentationsfigur von Antikke bis zum beginn des 19. <\/em><em>Jahrhunderts<\/em>, Max Niemeyer Verlag, T\u00fcbingen 2006, p. 413.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">5<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0From the time of the arrival of Nicolas Despr\u00e9aux-Boileau\u2019s 1674 French translation of Longinus (<em>Trait\u00e9 du Sublime)<\/em>, the concept became associated with a particular aesthetic that could be learned and appropriated. During the eighteenth century and the first decades of the nineteenth century, the sublime was exclusively associated with aesthetics, but in Longinus and in the Baroque readings of Longinus it also encompassed a strong ethical-cum-moral element that was associated partly with the subject (the orator, poet or artist), but also with the work and its impact on the audience.<\/p>\n<p>This article addresses the possibility that Salvator Rosa might also have had philosophers in mind when he spoke of \u2018sublime subjects\u2019: it reviews the literary sources that Salvator Rosa may have known, and which may have shaped his perception of the two philosophers\u2019 lives and thinking. The focus then shifts to the ethical and moral aspects of Longinus\u2019s treatise, which offers a direct connection between the sublime and the ethics and lifestyles of pre-Socratic philosophers. The article also picks up on connections to the conceptual framework established by Giorgio Vasari (1511\u201374) concerning the status of the artist, the theme of the sublime and the perception of genius.<sup id=\"footnote-6\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"6\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nIn order to delimit this study to fit applicable constraints, later art theoreticians have not been included here. Choosing Vasary as the cut-off point is justified by the fact that Salvator Rosa is known to have been familiar with Vasari&amp;rsquo;s books.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">6<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The objective of the article is also to show how a range of formal devices such as <em>oscurit\u00e1<\/em> and <em>amplificatio<\/em> and can be linked directly to Longinus\u2019s concept of the sublime and to Vasari.<\/p>\n<h2><\/h2>\n<figure style=\"width: 665px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig.1_rosa_demokrit_hensunken_kms4112_resized.jpg\" width=\"665\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 1. <\/strong>Salvator Rosa: <em>Democritus in Meditation<\/em>. 1650-51. Oil on canvas. 344 x 214 cm. National Gallery of Denmark, inv. no. KMS4112. <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/zero\/1.0\/deed.da\">public domain<\/a>,\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/www.smk.dk\/en\/\">National Gallery of Denmark<\/a>.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<figure style=\"width: 665px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig.2_rosa_diogenea_kaster_kms4113_resized.jpg\" width=\"665\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 2. <\/strong>Salvator Rosa: <em>Diogenes casting away\u00a0his bowl<\/em>. 1651-52. Oil on canvas. 344 x 212,5 cm. National Gallery of Denmark, inv. no. KMS4113. <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/zero\/1.0\/deed.da\">public domain<\/a>,\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/www.smk.dk\/en\/\">National Gallery of Denmark<\/a>.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h2>The mute language of painting<\/h2>\n<p>The pendants show the two philosophers in the same forest, disregarding the fact that they did not live at the same time. They also occupy the same dusky setting where the cold white light of the moon seems to be the only source of light. Clouds drift by in the sky above, and an owl, bird of night, sits silently on a branch high above Democritus. While Diogenes is surrounded by an audience, Democritus is alone. He has just shut the pages of a large book, cradling it in his lap. Wearing an expression of wry mournfulness, he gazes inwards \u2013 his head cradled in his hand as he leans up against a sarcophagus. Among the teeming wealth of detail in this composition, Salvator Rosa has taken pains to depict a number of familiar, yet enigmatic relics from the monument culture typical of antiquity. The sheer variety of types on display makes it seem as if Salvator Rosa is eager to demonstrate the scope of his knowledge and education: here we find a tripod, an urn, a sarcophagus, a stele, and to the left is a herm in the shape of Terminus, god of transitions. To the right is a toppled stele with mysterious hieroglyphics, identified by Richard W. Wallace as a stele reproduced in Valeriano\u2019s <em>Hieroglyphica<\/em>, on which the inscription \u201cHumanae Vitae Conditio\u201d (the condition of human life) points to how death is a universal fact.<sup id=\"footnote-7\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"7\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nRichard W. Wallace: &amp;rdquo;Salvator Rosa&amp;#39;s &amp;rsquo;Democritius&amp;rsquo; and &amp;rsquo;L&amp;#39;Humana Fragilita&amp;rsquo;&amp;rdquo;,&amp;nbsp;<em>The Art Bulletin<\/em>, Vol. 50, March 1968, p. 25; regarding learned friends with archaeological insights that Rosa may have consulted, see also Langdon in: London &amp;amp; Fort Worth 2010, pp. 31f.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">7<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Dead animals surround Democritus. Most of the animal carcases have become skeletons, and by the feet of Democritus we also find a human skull between an array of books and documents showing geometric figures. In the background a human skeleton tumbles out from a desecrated grave, the totality offering an eerie reminder of the inevitability of death. <strong>[fig. 3]<\/strong><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 1100px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter oversized\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/02\/fig.3a_detalje_af_rosa_demokrit_kms4112.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1100\" height=\"733\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 3. <\/strong>Scull and scrolls, signed bottom left corner. Detail of Salvator Rosa: <em>Democritus in Meditation<\/em>. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.smk.dk\/en\/\">National Gallery of Denmark<\/a>, see fig. 1.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>The darkness that envelops Democritus makes it difficult to make out all the details; even the philosopher\u2019s face resides in shadow, apart from the tip of his nose. The same dark manner of painting cloaks the details in the Diogenes painting. Diogenes\u2019s face is cut through by a diagonal shadow; perhaps Salvator Rosa has painted metaphorical shadows here and in the face of Democritus. Several of Diogenes\u2019s followers listen attentively from the gloom, and the boy who serves as the subject of his speech is at the very front of the shadowy foreground. There are countless nuances of black here, ranging from the brown-hued and reddish to green-hued, bluish and violet blacks.<\/p>\n<p>In these pendants Salvator Rosa chose to create a tightly condensed pictorial space where the spectator\u2019s eye is not allowed to roam out into infinity, but is stopped at the first plane. Salvator Rosa has opted for a radical solution in the upright format of these compositions, for the figures take up only the lower half while slender tree trunks and the sky make up the uppermost part. We are in a desolate place where torn and broken trees and branches testify to the raw forces of nature as expressed in inclement weather and horrific storms. Employing an exquisite compositional device, Salvator Rosa uses the tree trunks to echo the philosophers\u2019 poses. The governing idea behind Salvator Rosa\u2019s composition unfurls itself through this device, showing how a repetition, expansion or extension \u2013 a \u2018principle of amplification\u2019 \u2013 intensifies and enhances the overall feel of the painting. It is via such <em>amplificatio<\/em> that Salvator Rosa achieves an effective sense of harmony and interplay in the composition and a strong visual pull between the philosophers, the tree trunks and the skies in the two works.<\/p>\n<p>Typically of Salvator Rosa, the paintings were not, despite their large scale, commissioned pieces, but his own free inventions. He painted <em>Democritus in Meditation<\/em> in 1650 while staying in Monte Rufoli with friends of his, the brothers Maffei. In a letter dated 3 October 1650 Salvator Rosa says: \u201cwe are still at Monte Rufoli, and we will stay here for another eight days to accommodate a large canvas I have had to complete, and now we must wait for it to dry so that it can be rolled up\u201d.<sup id=\"footnote-8\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"8\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nZahle 1937, p. 151; Salvatore Rosa and Festa Borrelli: <em>Lettere &amp;ndash; Salvatore Rosa<\/em>, Testi Storici, Filosofici E Letterari Istituto Italiano per Gli Studi Storici 12, Il Mulino, Bologna 2003, no. 73, pp. 80f., letter dated 3\/10 1650.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">8<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The painting was to be transported to Rome, and in March of 1651 it was exhibited in the Pantheon, which was used as a church at the time (Santa Maria dei Martiri). Salvator Rosa used the first public exhibition of the year to present his new masterpiece.<sup id=\"footnote-9\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"9\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nSince the 1630s, public exhibitions at the Pantheon had been arranged by <em>Congregazione dei Virtuosi<\/em>, a church-run cultural academy for the promotion of Christian art. One of the chapels in the Pantheon was dedicated to Saint Joseph, patron saint of the society, and so the day of Saint Joseph, 19 March, was chosen as the annual date of the exhibition. Regarding Salvator Rosa&amp;rsquo;s monumental paintings, which he presented to the general public at the exhibitions in the Pantheon and at other exhibitions celebrating the saints at various churches. Haskell: <em>Patrons and painters &amp;ndash; a Study in the Relations Between Italian Art and Society in the Age of the Baroque<\/em>, Yale University Press, New Haven 1980, pp. 140ff.; Xavier Salomon in: London &amp;amp; Fort Worth 2010, pp. 74-77; 80&amp;ndash;94.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">9<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Salvator Rosa had generated considerable interest in the upcoming reveal of the Democritus painting by being very secretive, barring all except one friend from access to his studio. With all this mystique surrounding the painting, its unveiling was eagerly anticipated. Rosa sought to sell the work, but was unable to fetch the price he wanted.<sup id=\"footnote-10\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"10\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nFor a detailed account of the sale, see Erik Zahle, <em>Kunstmuseets Aarsskrift<\/em>, s. 145-155; <em>Lettere 2003<\/em>, nr. 92, pp. 98f., letter dated 18\/4 1651.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">10<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0A patron bought it for 250 scudi, but the deal was cancelled. Perhaps it was at this point that he decided to create a companion piece for Democritus in the form of <em>Diogenes casting away\u00a0his bowl<\/em>. The Venetian envoy in Rome, Niccol\u00f2 Sagredi, bought the pendants for 300 ducats at some point before 6 July 1652. He later took them to his hometown, where they remained in his family\u2019s ownership for many generations. Salvator Rosa later regretted this sale because the newly appointed papal legate, Monsignore Gaetano, would have paid 500 scudi and given the two philosopher paintings to the Habsburg king Philip IV (king 1621\u201365), who ruled Spain, Portugal, Naples and Sicily.<\/p>\n<p>Scenes depicting ancient philosophers were popular at the time, and in 1662, long after he created the pendants, Salvator Rosa did a number of prints depicting philosophers and ascetic hermits. His paintings formed the basis for the prints depicting Democritus and Diogenes, whereas the other images \u2013 leaves showing scenes such as Diogenes and Alexander, Plato\u2019s Academy, etc. \u2013 exist only as prints. <strong>[figs. 4-5]<\/strong><sup id=\"footnote-11\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"11\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nRichard W. Wallace:&amp;nbsp;<em>The etchings of Salvator Rosa<\/em>, Princeton, N.J. 1979, Democritus: pp. 261-266, ill. p. 263; Diogenes: pp. 257-258. ill. p. 259; Cf.: P. Bellini: <em>Italian Masters of the Seventeenth Century<\/em>&amp;nbsp;(<em>The Illustrated Bartsch<\/em> 46 (commentary)) Abaris, New York 1985, Cat. 005, pp. 342f. and cat. 007, pp. 345f. The engravings are reversed compared to the paintings due to the printing technique. Both engravings are part of the Royal Collection of Graphic Arts, the National Gallery of Denmark.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">11<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In Salvator Rosa\u2019s graphic oeuvre the pictures no longer act as pendants. Indeed, pairing up Democritus and Diogenes was not usual within seventeenth-century Italian painting.<\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 692px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig.4_rosa_demokrit_i_betragtninger_kksgb13528.jpg\" width=\"692\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 4.\u00a0<\/strong>Salvator Rosa: <em>Democritus in Meditation<\/em>. (1662). Etching. 456 x 276 mm. The Royal Collection of Graphic Art, National Gallery of Denmark, inv. no.\u00a0KKSgb13528.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/zero\/1.0\/deed.da\">public domain<\/a>,\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/www.smk.dk\/en\/\">National Gallery of Denmark<\/a>.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<figure style=\"width: 708px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig.5_rosa_diogenes_bortkaster_kksgb13525.jpg\" width=\"708\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 5.\u00a0<\/strong>Salvator Rosa: <em>Diogenes casting away\u00a0his bowl<\/em>. 1661\u201362. Etching 453 x 274 mm. The Royal Collection of Graphic Art, National Gallery of Denmark, inv. no. KKSgb13525.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/zero\/1.0\/deed.da\">public domain<\/a>,\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/www.smk.dk\/en\/\">National Gallery of Denmark<\/a>.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<h2>Research history<\/h2>\n<p><em>Democritus in Meditation<\/em> and <em>Diogenes casting away\u00a0his bowl<\/em> have been the subject of much art historical research. Baldinucci described the <em>Democritus<\/em> painting with particular emphasis on its transitory elements: \u201cDemocritus contemplating a large quantity of skeletons and other decayed and devoured things.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-12\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"12\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\n&amp;rdquo;Democrito, in atto di contemplare gran quantit\u00e0 di scheletri, ed altre cosa consumate&amp;rdquo;, Wendy Wassyng Roworth: <em>&amp;ldquo;Pictor Succensor&amp;rdquo; A Study of Salvator Rosa as Satirist, Cynic and Painter<\/em>, Garland Publishing, Inc., New York &amp;amp; London 1978, p. 273, no. 3.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">12<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Erik Zahle identified the literary source of the paintings as an apocryphal letter by Hippocrates, and others have found supplementary sources such as Lucian\u2019s <em>The Lover of Lies, or The Doubter<\/em>, in which Democritus shuts himself up in a tomb in order to find the peace and quiet necessary to write.<sup id=\"footnote-13\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"13\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nZahle 1937, pp. 145-155; Roworth 1978, pp. 274f.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">13<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Wallace (1968) and others have discussed the <em>vanitas <\/em>iconography, identifying the monuments that surround Democritus.<sup id=\"footnote-14\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"14\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nWallace 1968, pp. 21-32; In his biography Jonathan Scott specifically points to the vanitas theme in the Democritus painting, drawing parallels to D\u00fcrer and Castiglione. Cf. Jonathan Scott: <em>Salvator Rosa &amp;ndash; His Life and times<\/em>, Yale University Press, New Haven 1995, pp. 95-100.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">14<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In her doctoral dissertation (1978) Wendy Wassyng Roworth offers an explanation of why Salvator Rosa chose to make pendants of Democritus and Diogenes: taking her starting point in Robert Burton\u2019s <em>Anatomy of Melancholy (<\/em>1621) she inscribes the two philosophers in the familiar dichotomy <em>vita contemplativa \u2013 vita activa<\/em>, with Democritus as the meditating melancholic and Diogenes as the one who translates the thoughts of an ideal life into actual practice.<sup id=\"footnote-15\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"15\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nRoworth 1978, pp. 284-286.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">15<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In this sense Salvator Rosa addresses, according to Roworth, Aristotle\u2019s separation of philosophy into the contemplative and the active; Aristotle delegated physics and logics to the field of theory, whereas ethics and politics belonged to the practical sphere.<sup id=\"footnote-16\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"16\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nRoworth 1978, p. 286.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">16<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In an aside, Salvator Rosa may also have been visually inspired by the frontispiece of Burton\u2019s <em>The Anatomy of Melancholy, <\/em>where one of the small scenes in the margin shows Democritus sitting in his garden in Abdera with a book on his lap and his head resting on his hand.<sup id=\"footnote-17\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"17\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nRaymond Klibansky, Erwin Panofsky and Fritz Saxl: <em>Saturn and Melancholy &amp;ndash; Studies in the History of Natural Philosophy, Religion and Art<\/em>, Nelson 1964, p. 374, no. 2, fig. 112. This frontispiece first appears in the 1628 edition and was etched by Le Blon.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">17<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Haskell (1980) was the first scholar to account for the public exhibitions\u2019 function as marketing vehicles that allowed artists to showcase and sell work outside the scope of the conventional and powerful patrons and institutions that commissioned work.<sup id=\"footnote-18\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"18\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nHaskell 1980, pp. 203-241.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">18<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0This theme has subsequently been addressed in depth by Xavier F. Salomon in the catalogue for the 2010 exhibition <em>Salvator Rosa (1615\u20131673) Bandits, Wilderness and Magic<\/em> at the Dulwich Picture Gallery, London and at the Kimbell Art Museum, Texas.<sup id=\"footnote-19\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"19\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLondon &amp;amp; Fort Worth 2010, pp. 74-99.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">19<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>In the exhibition catalogue <em>Salvator Rosa. Tra mito e magia<\/em> (2008) Caterina Volpi sees Democritus and Diogenes as personifications of \u2018the new man\u2019, i.e. of the learned humanist who is as interested in studies of zoology as he is in anatomy, alchemy, astrology and Egyptology.<sup id=\"footnote-20\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"20\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nNicola Spinosa: <em>Salvator Rosa &#8211; Tra Mito E Magia<\/em>, Museo Di Capodimonte,&amp;nbsp;Electa, Naples 2008; Caterina Volpi: &amp;ldquo;Filosofo nel dipingere: Salvator Rosa tra Roma e Firenze (1639-1659)&amp;rdquo;, op.cit., pp. 28-46, regarding the pendants see especially pp. 36-37. Hereinafter the exhibition catalogue is quoted as &amp;rdquo;Naples 2008&amp;rdquo;.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">20<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Volpi takes the Renaissance world view expressed by the <em>Wunderkammer <\/em>distinction between <em>artificialia<\/em> and <em>naturalia<\/em> and applies it to the pendants, linking them to Salvator Rosa\u2019s time in Florence where there was an established circle of clients for philosopher scenes among the city\u2019s intellectual scene \u2013 unlike in Rome, where he struggled to sell the monumental pendants at the desired price. In the same exhibition catalogue Ebert-Schifferer contextualizes the Copenhagen Demokritus and Diogenes within Rosa\u2019s memento mori and whichcraft motives in relation to the Wunderkammer of that time.<sup id=\"footnote-21\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"21\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nSybille Ebert-Schifferer:&amp;nbsp;&amp;rdquo;Il teatro filosofico della vanit\u00e0. Le iconografie di Salvator Rosa&amp;rdquo;, Naples 2008, pp. 66-82, in particular pp. 71, 73 og 76.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">21<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>In 2010 Volpi, Sybille Ebert-Schifferer and Helen Langdon published the anthology <em>Salvator Rosa e il suo tempo 1615\u00ad\u20131673<\/em>, in which Francesco Lofano writes about the iconography of the Democritus scene, pointing to hitherto unknown written sources (Tasso and Torquato Accetto) and describing the Democritus motif as the era\u2019s emblem and paradigm for the melancholic temperament.<sup id=\"footnote-22\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"22\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nFrancesco Lofano: &amp;ldquo;Salvator Rosa e il tema del Democritus Cogitans&amp;rdquo;, Sybill Ebert-Schifferer, Helen Langdon, Caterina Volpi, eds.: <em>Salvator Rosa E Il Suo Tempo 1615-1673<\/em>, Campisano, Rome 2010, pp. 235-242.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">22<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Caterina Volpi\u2019s monograph <em>Salvator Rosa (1615-1673): \u2019Pittore famoso\u2019<\/em> (2014) with a total of 685 pages and 325 catalogued paintings, is a substantial source to scolarly knowledge on Salvator Rosa.<sup id=\"footnote-23\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"23\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nCaterina Volpi: <em>Salvator Rosa (1615-1673) &amp;rsquo;Pittore famoso&amp;rsquo;<\/em>. Ugo Bozzi Editore, Rome 2014, cat. 162-163, 480-482, pp. 245-252.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">23<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Of the Democritus in Copenhagen Volpi provides to the context and reception.<\/p>\n<p>In the exhibition catalogue <em>Salvator Rosa (1615\u20131673) Bandits, Wilderness and Magic<\/em> (2010) Helen Langdon focuses on the vanitas theme: \u201c[the paintings] show Democritus bewailing human vanity and corruption, while Diogenes extols the virtues of the simple life \u2026.. Rosa now emphasizes Diogenes the teacher\u201d.<sup id=\"footnote-24\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"24\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLondon &amp;amp; Fort Worth 2010, pp. 197-198.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">24<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Langdon does not think that Salvator Rosa identified with these philosophers. Her reading of selected works on the basis of seventeenth-century aesthetic theory is rich in perspectives, and she firmly establishes that the main source for the period\u2019s concept of the sublime is the ancient Greek treatise <em>On the Sublime<\/em> by Longinus.<sup id=\"footnote-25\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"25\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nHelen Langdon has addressed his landscapes from the 1660s and his magic and prophetic subjects, see London &amp;amp; Fort Worth 2010, pp. 126-135; and &amp;rdquo;The Demosthenes of Painting. Salvator Rosa&amp;rdquo;, Caroline van Eck et al., eds.: <em>Translations of the sublime &#8211; the early modern reception and dissemination of Longinus&amp;#39; Peri Hupsous in rhetoric, the visual arts, architecture and the theatre, <\/em>Intersections 24, Brill, Boston 2012, p. 163-185.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">25<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0According to Langdon, Salvator Rosa\u2019s concept of the sublime is partly based on the concept of <em>novit\u00e1<\/em>; the ability to think up new things and to rethink known things. His ambitions to present himself as a learned man and to cultivate the concept of novit\u00e1 have also been addressed by Scott.<sup id=\"footnote-26\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"26\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nScott 1995, p. 98, quotes a correspondence between Rosa and Ricciardi, aimed at finding a suitable and innovative subject after completing his work on Democritus.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">26<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Langdon also emphasises the concepts of rapture and transport, fear and horror, and she reads an aesthetic of the sublime into Salvator Rosa\u2019s landscapes from the 1660s and into the peculiar painting <em>Pan and Pindar<\/em> (1666, Ariccia, Palazzo Chigi) while also providing an introduction to the reception of Longinus in Rome around this time.<sup id=\"footnote-27\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"27\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLangdon 2012, p. 164, no. 6: concerning Salvator Rosa and the cultural fraternity <em>Gli Umoristi<\/em> (including Alessandro Tassoni and Paganino Gaudenzio) and the Barberinis as key figures. Langdon also points to this circle&amp;rsquo;s interest in Longinus: G. Costa: &amp;rdquo;Appunti sulla fortuna del Pseudo-Longino: Alessandro Tassoni e Paganino Gaudenzio&amp;rdquo;, <em>Studi Seicenteschi 25<\/em>, 1984, pp. 123&amp;ndash;143.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">27<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In her account of the reception of Longinus in mid-seventeenth century Rome, Langdon calls particular attention to a book from the Barberini library: Leone Allacci\u2019s <em>De erroribus magnorum virorum in dicendo <\/em>(1635).<sup id=\"footnote-28\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"28\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLeone Allacci: <em>Leonis Allatii De Erroribus Magnorum Virorum in Dicendo Dissertatio Rhetorica<\/em>, Rome 1635. Allacci&amp;rsquo;s treatise on rhetoric and the sublime can be found at the Royal Library in Copenhagen. Among antiquity&amp;rsquo;s writers of treatises on the theory of style and the sublime the book mentions Hermogenes and Demosthenes at least as often as it mentions Longinus. Allacci also quotes from the classics of rhetoric &amp;ndash; Quintilian and Cicero. A wealth of other names from the realms of ancient poetry and philosophy is also scattered throughout the text.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">28<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Salvator Rosa moved in learned and scholarly circles in Florence and Rome, and his patrons included highly cultured families such as the Brancaccios in Naples, the Medici in Florence and the Omodei family in Milano.<sup id=\"footnote-29\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"29\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nVolpi in: Naples 2008, p. 29.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">29<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0As was mentioned earlier he was friends with the learned Maffei brothers, Giulio and Ugo, and was a regular visitor to their home in Volterra. He did, however, have one friend in particular, Giovan Battista Ricciardi (1624\u201386), on whom he relied in his work with different subject matter and the interpretation of literary sources.<sup id=\"footnote-30\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"30\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nScott 1995, pp. 67-68. Even though he was learned within a wide range of arts subjects, Ricciardi was only appointed Reader in moral philosophy at the university in Pisa late in life. Until that point he mostly lived in Florence, where he &amp;ndash; like Salvator Rosa &amp;ndash; was part of the intelligentsia.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">30<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The question is whether one can regard this philosopher duo as a reflection of Salvator Rosa\u2019s own ideal perception of himself as a painter-philosopher and painter-poet, picking up the mantle from great Renaissance artists such as Michelangelo and role models from classical antiquity who also worked simultaneously with visual arts and epic poetry. This is exactly the kind of self-image that Salvator Rosa evokes in the three stanzas from his satire <em>Invidia<\/em> (<em>Envy<\/em>), quoted at the beginning of this article. Salvator Rosa wrote several satires and envious colleagues accused him of not having written the satires himself. To defend himself Salvator Rosa wrote <em>Invidia<\/em>, pointing out that ever since antiquity many eminent artists have worked concurrently as painters, sculptors, philosophers and poets. Michelangelo, whom he calls by his first name, Buonarruoti, is explicitly named as an example, and Vasari\u2019s books are listed as a reference. Add to this the fact that Salvator Rosa\u2019s ambition was to achieve sublimity, and it becomes natural to turn our gaze to the classical source of knowledge of rhetorical and poetic sublimity \u2013 the treatise by Longinus \u2013 and its popularisation through some of the art theory concepts we see at play in Vasari\u2019s treatise.<\/p>\n<h2>Literary sources<\/h2>\n<p>The Greek philosopher Democritus (circa 460\u2013400 BC) is among the pre-Socratic natural philosophers whose thinking was concerned with cosmology, that is with the creation of the world and the origins of all things. Sixteenth and seventeenth century art established a tradition for depicting Democritus as the laughing philosopher, in contrast to Heraclitus, the weeping philosopher.<sup id=\"footnote-31\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"31\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nFor examples by Giuseppe de Ribera, Vel\u00e1zquez and Netherlandish role models, see Diederik Bakhuijs et al.: <em>Varia. Les Curieux Philosophes de Vel\u00e1zquez et de Ribera<\/em>, exhibition catalogue, Mus\u00e9e des Beaux-Arts Rouen, Lyon 2005.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">31<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Their contrasting moods were responses to the same issue: the folly of man.<\/p>\n<p>According to Erik Zahle, the written source behind Salvator Rosa\u2019s Democritus is an apocryphal letter from the physician Hippocrates to his friend Damagetus, relating the story of a visit to Democritus in Abdera.<sup id=\"footnote-32\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"32\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nZahle 1937, p. 150, quotes part of the letter. See also Scott 1995, p. 97. The literary basis for the subject is stated to be Hippocrates&amp;rsquo;s apocryphal letter to Demagetus, which was widely known in the seventeenth century and quoted in Robert Burton: <em>Anatomy of Melancholy<\/em>, 1621.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">32<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Hippocrates found the philosopher in his garden, writing a book about the melancholic temperament and madness. Scattered on the ground around Democritus was an array of animal carcasses he had dissected in order to establish where this <em>atra bilis, <\/em>this black bile or melancholy, was located in purely anatomical terms. He was also surrounded by books, and on his knees he held a large tome, at turns \u201cwriting eagerly, then resting for a long while, sunk in solitary contemplation\u201d. In Salvator Rosa\u2019s painting Democritus is not shown in his garden, but alone in a graveyard with ancient monuments.<sup id=\"footnote-33\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"33\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nAt this point in time there was a tradition in art for depicting both philosophers together. There are surviving examples of juxtapositions of Diogenes and Hippocrates in Dutch seventeenth-century art that date back to depiction by Elsheimer, see Richard W. Wallace: &amp;rdquo;Salvator Rosa&amp;#39;s &amp;rsquo;Democritius&amp;rsquo; and &amp;rsquo;L&amp;#39;Humana Fragilita&amp;rsquo;&amp;rdquo;,&amp;nbsp;<em>The Art Bulletin<\/em>, Vol. 50, March 1968, pp. 21-32, p. 24. A painting of <em>Democritus and Hippocrates<\/em> painted by Pieter Lastman (1583&amp;ndash;1633) and dated 1622 was acquired in 2013 by Mus\u00e9e des Beaux Arts, Lille. For other examples of Democritus and Hippocrates together, see Wallace 1968, p. 24, no. 32.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">33<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>In Salvator Rosa\u2019s time, the historical treatise written by Diogenes La\u00ebrtius (circa 200 AD) was one of the more widespread sources of knowledge about Greek philosophy. Even though La\u00ebrtius\u2019s history of philosophy is not always reliable, it remains one of posterity\u2019s key sources of knowledge about the lives and thinking of the Greek philosophers because so much of the philosophers\u2019 own written production has been lost \u2013 if indeed it ever existed, given that much philosophical enterprise was based on oral discourses and oral tradition. Perhaps Salvator Rosa has also used La\u00ebrtius as a source.<\/p>\n<p>Democritus is best known for his prophetic natural philosophy stating that everything is made up of atoms. According to La\u00ebrtius, Democritus not only wrote treatises on the origins of the world; he also wrote prolifically on subjects such as moral ethics, physics, mathematics and geometry, music, cooking, agriculture, the art of war and painting.<sup id=\"footnote-34\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"34\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLaertses 1811, vol. I, pp. 421f.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">34<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Through references in Horace we know that before Plato, Democritus described poetic inspiration as a kind of rapt enthusiasm.<sup id=\"footnote-35\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"35\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nPenelope Murray: &amp;rdquo;Poetic Genius and its Classical Origins&amp;rdquo;, Penelope Murray, ed.: <em>Genius, the History of an Idea<\/em>, Basil Blackwell, Oxford 1989, pp. 18, 21.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">35<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0La\u00ebrtius sums up Democritus\u2019s moral philosophy as follows:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The chief good he asserts to be cheerfulness; which, however, he does not consider the same as pleasure; as some people, who have misunderstood him, have fancied that he meant; but he understands by cheerfulness, a condition according to which the soul lives calmly and steadily, being disturbed by no fear, or superstition, or other passion<sup id=\"footnote-36\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"36\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLaertses 1811, vol. I, p. 421.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">36<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Democritus\u2019s philosophy of life states that we should aim for attitudes of modesty and duty; such a view of life will pave the way for inner peace and a sense of harmonious equilibrium. Much of this philosophy of life was incorporated in Stoic philosophy, and perhaps this is why Salvator Rosa was interested in this particular philosopher, portraying Democritus as a thinker indulging in solitude by choice. For Salvator Rosa may well be depicting Democritus as the laughing philosopher \u2013 a moniker given to him back in antiquity \u2013 but his smile takes on a melancholy quality due to his pensive attitude. Rosa has portrayed his Democritus as La\u00ebrtius describes him: as a philosopher who has withdrawn to a secluded graveyard.<\/p>\n<p>It was said of Diogenes of Sinope (circa 400\u2013325 BC) that he lived \u2018like a dog\u2019, which lent its name to the Cynic school of Greek philosophy of which he was a founder (Kynikos: Greek for \u2018doglike\u2019).<sup id=\"footnote-37\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"37\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nKarsten Friis Johansen and Carl Henrik Kock: <em>Den Europ\u00e6iske Filosofis Historie<\/em>, I-II, Nyt Nordisk Forlag, Copenhagen 1991 (1996). Vols. I-II, vol. I, pp. 554-556; Richard Parry: &amp;rdquo;Ancient Ethical Theory&amp;rdquo;, <em>Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy<\/em>, 2014.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">37<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Diogenes placed emphasis on setting himself free from all those things that were conventionally seen as good things in life: a roof over one\u2019s head, nourishing and good food, some money put by. Instead Diogenes celebrated the beauty of the soul, striving for virtue in the form of moral and political virtue, which was considered a sign of particular excellence and skill.<sup id=\"footnote-38\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"38\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLa\u00ebrtses 1811, vol. I, pp. 254, 257.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">38<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Diogenes rolled himself in the scorching hot sands in summer and embraced the snow-clad statues in winter in order to harden himself for an ascetic life.<sup id=\"footnote-39\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"39\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLa\u00ebrtses 1811, vol. I, p. 240.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">39<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In La\u00ebrtius\u2019s biography Diogenes is praised as an excellent orator who kept his audiences spellbound and could easily convince them on any given matter.<sup id=\"footnote-40\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"40\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLa\u00ebrtses 1811, vol. I, p. 262.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">40<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0He held daily discussions with his students and followers.<sup id=\"footnote-41\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"41\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nThe students included the philosophers Phocion the Good, Stilpo of Megara and Monim of Syracuse. La\u00ebrtses 1811, vol. I, pp. 262, 264.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">41<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0La\u00ebrtius relates how Diogenes deliberately offended absolutely everyone; he would insult fellow philosophers such as Plato, but he would also mock women.<sup id=\"footnote-42\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"42\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLa\u00ebrtses 1811, vol. I, pp. 251f., p. 257.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">42<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The episode shown in Salvator Rosa\u2019s painting is one of the many anecdotes told by La\u00ebrtius about the life of Diogenes, but the story can also be found in a slightly different form in an apocryphal letter from Diogenes himself to the cynic Crates.<sup id=\"footnote-43\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"43\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nZahle 1937, p. 150.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">43<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0All that Diogenes owned was a bag for food, a drinking cup and a spoon. When Diogenes saw a child drinking water out of its hands, he threw away his cup, saying \u201cA child has beaten me in plainness of living\u201d.<sup id=\"footnote-44\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"44\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLa\u00ebrtses 1811, vol. I, p. 245.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">44<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0He similarly cast away his spoon when he saw a child eating lentil gruel with a small piece of hollow bread. After these episodes he arrived at the following conclusion: \u201cEverything belongs to the gods; and wise men [i.e. philosophers] are the friends of the gods. All things are in common among friends; therefore everything belongs to wise men\u201d.<sup id=\"footnote-45\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"45\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLa\u00ebrtses 1811, vol. I, p. 245.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">45<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0He is supposed to have stated that the tragic curse had come upon him, for that he was houseless and citiless, a piteous exile from his dear native land; a wandering beggar, scraping a pittance poor from day to day. And another of his sayings was that he opposed confidence to fortune, nature to law, and reason to suffering.<sup id=\"footnote-46\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"46\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLa\u00ebrtses 1811, vol. I, p. 246.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">46<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Courage, nature and reason are guiding lights in Diogenes\u2019s ethics. Similar guidelines also appear in the Stoics, which used to say that it is human nature to use reason. To the Cynic Diogenes and to the Stoics, the good life was a life of virtue; they understood virtue as the sum of the traits that enable mankind to live by his nature rather than by convention. In Diogenes we see the early beginnings of the idea that the purpose of life is to enter a mental state characterised by being set free from material goods and from other people\u2019s opinions concerning good manners and proper conduct. In Stoic and Epicurean thinking this idea evolved towards the position that happiness relies on setting yourself free from things you can lose, such as material goods and status symbols. In this way Diogenes\u2019s thoughts on ethics came to be important to these schools of philosophy, which incorporated them in somewhat modified form.<sup id=\"footnote-47\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"47\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nThe founder of Stoicism, Zeno (335&amp;ndash;265 BC) was greatly influenced by the outlook of life adopted by Diogenes and the other Cynics. Friis Johansen 1996, p. 554.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">47<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>What impact did the old philosophers have in Salvator Rosa\u2019s own day? The most important exponent of the wave of Stoicism seen in the Renaissance and the Baroque would probably be Justus Lipsius (1547\u20131606), a Flemish humanist and classical philologist who spent long periods living and working in Rome. Lipsius was the first to make comparative studies of the doctrines of Stoicism and Christianity.<sup id=\"footnote-48\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"48\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nJason Lewis Saunders: <em>Justus Lipsius, The Philosophy of Renaissance Stoicism<\/em>, Liberal Arts Press, New York 1955, pp. 218-219.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">48<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Lipsius was driven by a wish to find a shared fundamental starting point in all major ethical-moral coda. To Lipsius the Christian \u2018truths\u2019 were highlighted and made clearer by the study of Stoicism and of ancient philosophy in general. Lipsius\u2019s interest in Epicurus, Aristotle and their roots in Plato\u2019s philosophy was as deep as his interest in and study of Seneca, Zeno and other Stoics.<\/p>\n<h2>The ideal self-image<\/h2>\n<p>On several occasions Salvator Rosa declared, in his literary and painted output both, that he was a Stoic for whom ethical-moral matters were a lodestone. One example would be the satire <em>La Pittura,<\/em> in which he describes himself as a painter-poet who worked from an honest, pure white heart that was not short of love.<sup id=\"footnote-49\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"49\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\n&amp;rdquo;Scrissi i sensi d&amp;rsquo;un cor sincero, e bianco: \/ Che s&amp;rsquo;in vaghezza poi manca lo stile, \/ Nel Zelo al meno, e ne l&amp;rsquo;amor non manco.&amp;rdquo; <em>La Pittura<\/em>, p. 254, verses 849-852.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">49<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In the same satire Salvator Rosa indirectly states that his objective is to effect a moral invention of the grand manner, one in which there is no place for <em>superbia<\/em> (pride, superiority) or arrogance.<sup id=\"footnote-50\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"50\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\n&amp;rdquo;Ma chi s\u00e1 quel che io chiamo ignoranza \/ Non sia de&amp;rsquo;Grandi un&amp;rsquo;invenzion morale, \/ Per fuggir la superbia, e l&amp;rsquo;arroganza!&amp;rdquo; <em>La Pittura<\/em>, p. 233, verses 262-264.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">50<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>A self-portrait in The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, includes a table with a book by the Stoic philosopher Seneca.<sup id=\"footnote-51\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"51\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nScott 1995, p. 68, fig. 83. Scott believes that the painting depicts his friend Ricciardi, but this is contradicted by the museum itself, which describes it as a self-portrait in the sign accompanying it. Helen Langdon also believes the painting to be a self-portrait, cf. London &amp;amp; Fort Worth 2010, cat.no. 5, ill. pp. 115-116.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">51<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0On the book is a skull which Salvator Rosa is in the process of furnishing with a Greek inscription: \u201cBehold. Whither? When?\u201d On the desk we also find a <em>cartelino<\/em> with the inscription: \u201dSalvatore Rosa dipinse nell Eremo \/ e dono a Gio:Batt Ricciardi \/ suo Amico\u201d (depicted by Salvator Rosa in the lonely place \/ and given to Giovanni Battista Ricciardi \/ his friend). \u00a0The word <em>Eremo <\/em>comes from the Greek \u2018er\u00e9mos\u2019, which means a lonely, empty place (in a positive sense \u2013 an hermitage or retreat). Perhaps Salvator Rosa is referring to the Maffei brothers\u2019 country house, Monte Rufoli, for the painting was created around 1647, a time when Salvator Rosa and Ricciardi often stayed with the Maffei brothers. It was also during this period that Salvator Rosa worked at Monte Rufoli on what would become the National Gallery&#8217;s large painting of Democritus. In both these works Rosa made the night-time moon the only source of light in his picture.<\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 663px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig.6_rosa_genius.jpg\" width=\"663\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 6. <\/strong>Salvator Rosa: <em>The Genius of Salvator Rosa<\/em>.\u00a0Etching 457 x 275 mm. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.nga.gov\/content\/ngaweb.html\">National Gallery of Art<\/a>, Washington, inv. no. 1972.66.40. Photo: courtesy\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/images.nga.gov\/en\/page\/openaccess.html\">National Gallery of Art<\/a>, Washington.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Salvator Rosa\u2019s self-image is displayed in all its facets in an allegorical engraving with the title <em>The Genius of Salvator Rosa,\u00a0<\/em>where a sign at the bottom of the composition offers a comprehensive description: \u201dIngenuus, Liber, Pictor Succensor, et Aequus, \/ Sporator Opum, Mortisque. hic meus est Genius. \/ Salvator Rosa\u201d [translated by Wallace as: \u201cSincere, free, fiery painter, and equable, despiser of wealth and death, this is my genius. \/ Salvator Rosa\u201d].<sup id=\"footnote-52\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"52\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nRegarding Salvator Rosa&amp;rsquo;s view of himself as a painter, satirist and Stoic, as expressed in this allegorical self-portrait, see Richard W. Wallace:&amp;nbsp;&amp;rdquo;The Genius of Salvator Rosa&amp;rdquo;,&amp;nbsp;<em>The Art Bulletin<\/em>, 1965, pp. 471-480, especially p. 474; <em>The Illustrated Bartsch<\/em> 1985, Salvator Rosa (4512), pp. 374 f., no. 025 [B.24 (277)] where the woman with the dove is identified as <em>La Sincerit\u00e1<\/em>; and most recently: Maria Rosaria Nappi, Gregorio Angelini, and Istituto Nazionale per La Grafica, Museo Dell&amp;#39;Istituto:&amp;nbsp;<em>Rosa-Rame &#8211; Salvator Rosa Incisore Nelle Collezioni Dell&amp;#39;Istituto Nazionale per La Grafica, Etchings by Salvator Rosa in the Collections of the Istituto Nazionale per La Grafica<\/em>, Gangemi Editore, Rom 2014, pp. 137-141.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">52<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0<strong>[fig. 6]<\/strong> The scene is set in a solitary graveyard, but instead of a melancholy philosopher we find Salvator Rosa himself, leaning upon a cornucopia from which money tumbles out onto the bare earth. Wearing a crown of leaves on his head, he receives or gives his \u201csincere, pure white heart\u201d to a woman holding a dove \u2013 a personification of <em>sincerit\u00e1<\/em> (sincerity) \u2013 and at the same time Salvator Rosa receives the hat and sceptre of liberty from <em>libert\u00e1<\/em> (liberty).<sup id=\"footnote-53\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"53\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nThe iconography of Sincerity and Freedom is derived from Ripa&amp;rsquo;s Iconologia, Scott 1995, p. 166, figs. 167-168.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">53<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The other allegorical figures posing across from Salvator Rosa are <em>la pittura<\/em> (the art of painting), a Stoic philosopher holding a set of scales symbolising equilibrium, and a satyress representing satire as a literary format.<\/p>\n<p>It almost goes without saying that Diogenes and Democritus, both of whom had had such great impact on the Stoic view of life, were role models for Salvator Rosa. They were natural subjects for his new ethical-heroic vein of painting, particularly as he chose to depict episodes from the lives of Diogenes and Democritus that resonated with the philosophical ethics of Stoicism. Would Salvator Rosa have seen this philosopher duo as sublime subject matter? Diogenes gives us the answer when he places the wise, i.e. philosophers, on a par with the gods, making them his friends and telling them that \u201cwhat is yours is also mine\u201d.<sup id=\"footnote-54\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"54\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLa\u00ebrtses 1811, vol. I, p. 245.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">54<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Like the poet\u2019s transcendent verse and the gods\u2019 doings, the thinking of these two philosophers belongs to the highest strata that only the sublime can reach. With his sheer originality, borne up on the wings of his imagination, Salvator Rosa places himself right in the slipstream of philosophers, poets \u2013 and indeed of the gods themselves.<\/p>\n<p>Salvator Rosa had a particular interest in philosophers as artistic subject matter, and perhaps we may read his choice of Democritus and Diogenes as a reflection of his own self-image: according to Aristotelian tradition, the artist, the poet and the philosopher all shared a sombre mind. In Longinus the sublime denotes a greatness of spirit \u2013 magnanimity, <em>megalopsych\u00eda<\/em> \u00ad\u2013 and in order to create feats of sublime (oratorical) art the practitioner must possess magnanimity.<sup id=\"footnote-55\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"55\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nDietmar Till: <em>Das Doppelte Erhabene. Eine Argumentationsfigur von Antikke bis zum beginn des 19. <\/em><em>Jahrhunderts<\/em>, Max Niemeyer Verlag, T\u00fcbingen 2006, p. 90.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">55<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Might one conclude that the paintings of Democritus and Diogenes reflect Salvator Rosa\u2019s self-image as an artist, one where sublime feats rest on magnanimity, a greatness of spirit in the artist himself?<\/p>\n<h2>The sublime<\/h2>\n<p>Salvator Rosa used the Italian term <em>sublime<\/em> in his writings, expressing a hope that his own art was sublime.<sup id=\"footnote-56\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"56\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nSalvator Rosa: <em>Poesie E Lettere Edite E Inedite Di Salvator Rosa<\/em>, Naples 1892, p. 255. Towards the end of the satire <em>La Pittura <\/em>(On Painting), in the last stanza but four, the artist describes his own painting: &amp;rdquo;Siasi pur il mio stil sublime, \u00f2 vile, \/ \u00c0 color che sferzan s\u00f2 che non gusta: \/ sempre i palati amareggi\u00f2 la bile&amp;rdquo;.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">56<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In his satire <em>La Poesia<\/em> he also speaks of sublime places and sublime subjects addressed by Pythagoras and other philosophers.<sup id=\"footnote-57\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"57\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nSalvator Rosa,&amp;nbsp;<em>Poesie<\/em>, 1892, p. 228, 236, 250: &amp;rdquo;Presi gi\u00e0 sono i luoghi pi\u00f9 sublimi \/ Et il proverbio publico risuona: \/ In ogn&amp;rsquo; arte, e mestier beati i primi&amp;rdquo; (<em>La Poesia<\/em>, lines 136&amp;ndash;138); &amp;rdquo;Per sublime materia [sublimi materie] hanno disposto, \/ Dietro a Dion [Bion] Pitagora, et Antemio, \/ Lodar le rape, le cipolle, e &amp;rsquo;l mosto.&amp;rdquo; (<em>La Poesia<\/em>, lines 334&amp;ndash;336); &amp;rdquo;Pi\u00f9 sublime materia un di vi spinga \/ E si tralasci andar buggie cercando, \/ N\u00e8 pi\u00f9 follie Genio [genio Dirceo], \u00f2 Murcea vi finga. \/ (<em>La Poesia<\/em>, lines 730&amp;ndash;732).\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">57<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In <em>La Pittura<\/em> the moral invention of the grand manner is presented as the greatest possible goal an artist can strive for; what Salvator Rosa also calls ethical and heroic.<sup id=\"footnote-58\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"58\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\n<em>La Pittura<\/em>, p. 233, lines 262-264.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">58<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Salvator Rosa\u2019s primary artistic ambition was undoubtedly to create something sublime; to work with sublime subject matter in the moral tenor of the grand manner.<\/p>\n<p>Longinus\u2019s treaty on the sublime, <em>Per\u00ec H\u00fdpsous<\/em>, has traditionally been acknowledged for its major significance to art criticism and aesthetics in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. In art history the concept of \u2018the sublime\u2019 has often been employed in relation to art from the Enlightenment period, Classicism and most recently the postmodern era, always with shifts in meaning that reflect changing views among philosophers such as Edmund Burke (1729\u201397), Immanuel Kant (1724\u20131804) and many subsequent thinkers.<sup id=\"footnote-59\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"59\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nIn reference works on the history of aesthetics, the concept of <em>sublime <\/em>is often treated from the time of and on the basis of Despr\u00e9aux-Boileau&amp;rsquo;s translation of Longinus, see e.g. Karlheinz Barck, Dieter Kliche, Britta Hofmann eds.:&amp;nbsp;<em>\u00c4sthetische Grundbegriffe &amp;ndash; Historisches W\u00f6rterbuch in Sieben B\u00e4nden<\/em>, Verlag J.B. Metzler, Stuttgart, Weimar 2000; J\u00f6rg Heininger: &amp;rdquo;Erhaben&amp;rdquo;, vol. 2, 2001, pp. 275-310. The present study of the aesthetic concept of <em>the sublime <\/em>also employs the following secondary sources: Till 2006, who considers Longinus&amp;rsquo;s <em>Per\u00cc H\u00fdpsous<\/em> as seen in an ancient rhetorical-theoretical context and through a Protestant lens<em>;<\/em> Philip Shaw: <em>The Sublime<\/em>, The new Critical Idiom, Routledge, New York 2006. Shaw offers a chronological survey of the concept of the sublime from antiquity to postmodernism with particular emphasis on eighteenth-century English literature; Malcolm Heath: &amp;rdquo;Longinus and the Ancient Sublime&amp;rdquo;, Timothy M. Costelloe, ed.: <em>The Sublime from Antiquity to the Present<\/em>, Cambridge University Press 2012. The anthology considers the concept through the lens of the history of philosophy; D.A. Russell&amp;rsquo;s introduction and notes to the Greek text in the 1964 edition, Cassius Longinus and D.A. Russell: <em>&amp;lsquo;Longinus&amp;rsquo; On the Sublime<\/em>, Clarendon, Oxford 1964.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">59<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0This is because Longinus\u2019s writings did not become known in wider circles until the arrival of the aforementioned 1674 French translation by Despr\u00e9aux-Boileau.<\/p>\n<p>Recent decades have seen a renewed interest in the concept of the sublime, followed by a reassessment of the impact of Longinus\u2019s treatise during the period prior to Despr\u00e9aux-Boileau.<sup id=\"footnote-60\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"60\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nCaroline van Eck et al. 2012.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">60<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Scholars have become aware that in the early modern era, in the sixteenth and up through the seventeenth centuries, a concept of the sublime existed within painting, one that tapped the rich sources of antiquity, first and foremost Longinus.<sup id=\"footnote-61\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"61\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nRussell 1964, pp. XXII-XXIII. Russell&amp;rsquo;s edition includes the original Greek text. In the present article, the review of Longinus&amp;rsquo;s concept of the sublime is based on William Smith&amp;rsquo;s 1739 English translation of the Greek text. William Smith&amp;rsquo;s thorough translation (which according to Smith was nine years in the making and the subject of many reworkings and critical perusals by friends) is the first literal translation into English of the Greek original text. I have chosen to use this old translation because it seems more in keeping with seventeenth-century frames of reference than later translations. Using Smith&amp;rsquo;s translation means that one can be certain that the choices of word and various nuances in the translation are not influenced by Edmund Burke&amp;rsquo;s (1729&amp;ndash;97) or Immanuel Kant&amp;rsquo;s (1724&amp;ndash;1804) definitions of the sublime. In his preface Smith points out that Despr\u00e9aux-Boileau&amp;rsquo;s translation into French is not always true to Longinus&amp;rsquo;s text, and that previous English editions (J. Hall 1652, author unknown 1698) were based on the French translation. Quite in the spirit of Longinus, the preface ends by Smith stating his hopes and reservations concerning its reception: &amp;rdquo;.. if I have the good Fortune to contribute a little towards the fixing a true judicious Taste, and enabling my Readers to distinguish Sense from Sound, Grandeur from Pomp, and the Sublime from Fustian and Bombast, I shall think my Time well spent, and shall be ready to submit to the Censures of a Judge, but shall only smile at the Snarling of what is commonly called a Critic.&amp;rdquo;\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">61<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0What is more, new studies suggest that this treatise was not only known and used among scholars of the arts in Rome in the mid-seventeenth century, but that it was also used by e.g. Vasari in his <em>Le Vite,<\/em> which was first published in 1550, with an expanded edition published in 1568<em>.<sup id=\"footnote-62\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"62\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"<\/em>\nHana Gr\u00fcndler: &amp;rdquo;<em>Orrore, terrore, timore.<\/em> Vasari und das Erhabene&amp;rdquo;, Caroline van Eck et al. 2012, pp. 83-116.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">62<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Given that Salvator Rosa often referred to Vasari when justifying his artistic project (cf. the three stanzas from the satire <em>Invidia<\/em> at the beginning of this article), it is also relevant to include Vasari when contextualising the pendants within an ethical concept of the sublime.<\/p>\n<h2>Longinus<\/h2>\n<p>Philologists disagree on the actual identity of \u2018Longinus\u2019, which means that they also disagree on when the treaty <em>Per\u00ec H\u00fdpsous <\/em>was written. The text has survived in a version where the title page bears the text: \u201dDionysius Longinus On the Sublime\u201d, whereas the table of contents says: \u201dDionysius or Longinus\u201d, which has been interpreted as an \u2018either or\u2019, signifying that the author is either Cassius Longinus, a Greek literary scholar from the third century AD, or Dionysius of Halicarnassus, a critic from the first century BC.<sup id=\"footnote-63\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"63\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nRussell 1964, pp. XXII-XXIII.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">63<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The most widely accepted theory among philologists is that the treatise was written during the first century BC in Hellenistic Greece. Some scolars doubt the antique origin.<sup id=\"footnote-64\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"64\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nRobert Doran: <em>The theory of the Sublime. From Longinus to Kant<\/em>. Cambridge University Press 2015, p. 29.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">64<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In any case the reading is made challenging by a difficult style of writing and many lacunae, small and large, throughout the text. Some estimate that these missing parts account for approximately one third of the original Greek text.<sup id=\"footnote-65\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"65\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nRussell 1964, p. IX.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">65<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>To Longinus, the objective was not merely to write yet another instructive book on the art of oratory. It is not just a didactics on rhetoric, even though its target audience consisted of practitioners of this art: orators, politicians and judges. There is one crucial difference between Longinus\u2019s concept of the sublime and those that followed after: Longinus\u2019s idea of the sublime has both aesthetic <em>and <\/em>ethical or moral aspects, whereas later concepts of the sublime are exclusively concerned with aesthetic theory. Longinus does not define the concept of the sublime directly, but offers a range of characteristic traits instead: the sublime has to do with a special distinction and excellence of discourse; it is the one thing that is crucial in order to win the laurels of eternal fame.<sup id=\"footnote-66\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"66\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLonginus 1739, p. 1-3.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">66<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0He asks his reader whether absolutely anyone can achieve sublimity, answering his own question with a no \u2013 but everyone feels it when it is present.<sup id=\"footnote-67\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"67\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLonginus 1739, p. 15.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">67<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0He takes his starting point in anthropology: what everyone agrees is sublime, is indeed sublime. The sublime has a universal effect, meaning that the truly sublime will have its effect on everyone and at any time.<sup id=\"footnote-68\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"68\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLonginus 1739, pp. 14f.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">68<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In other words, Longinus looks at what man feels and how he responds. If you quickly forget a given poem or the orator\u2019s speech, or if they fall apart upon closer inspection, then those things are not sublime.<\/p>\n<h2>Nature \u2013 Technique<\/h2>\n<p>In chapter 8 of his treatise, Longinus lists five sources of the sublime.<sup id=\"footnote-69\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"69\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLonginus 1739, p. 16.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">69<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0His focus on the orator\u2019s or poet\u2019s innate, inborn gifts is the one aspect of Longinus\u2019s concept of the sublime that most clearly sets it apart from its antecedents and from later periods. The moral-ethical aspect or the artist\u2019s possession of innate virtue as a prerequisite of achieving sublimity also emerges among the five sources he specifies: 1) the power of forming \u201c<em>Boldness<\/em> and <em>Grandeur<\/em> in the Thoughts\u201d; 2) \u201cthe <em>Pathetic<\/em>, or the Power of raising the <em>Passions<\/em> to a violent and even enthusiastic degree\u201d; 3) the due formation of figures of thought and expression; 4) noble diction; and 5) the dignified and elevated composition of sentences.<sup id=\"footnote-70\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"70\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLonginus 1739, pp. 16-18. Longinus addresses these sources in greater detail in the chapters that follow.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">70<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The grandeur of thoughts can be unfolded through compositional devices, i.e. by exercising good judgment in the selection and combination of details and by means of the aforementioned \u2018principle of amplification\u2019, that is a gradual accumulation and intensification.<\/p>\n<p>Longinus makes an interesting distinction between the first two sources and the latter three: \u201cand these two being genuine Constituents of the Sublime, are the Gifts of Nature, whereas the other sorts depend in some measure upon Art.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-71\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"71\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLonginus 1739, chapter 8, p. 16.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">71<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Categorising the first two sources of the sublime as gifts of nature represents a remarkable new departure compared to other theories of the sublime from the era.<sup id=\"footnote-72\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"72\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nRegarding Ps.-Demetrius and Hermogenes, see Till 2006, p. 90.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">72<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0With this move, Longinus arranges the two categories of sources of the sublime in accordance with two familiar dichotomies in the worldview of antiquity: <em>natura\/ph\u00fdsis<\/em> versus <em>ars\/techne.<\/em><sup id=\"footnote-73\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"73\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nTill 2006, p. 90. In keeping with Longinus&amp;rsquo;s phrasing &amp;ldquo;Gifts of Nature&amp;rdquo;, Till sees the two key sources of sublimity (grandeur of thought\/the pathos of ideas and affects) as belonging to the realm of <em>natura\/ph\u00fdsis<\/em>.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">73<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Natura\/ph\u00fdsis belongs to nature and the realm of the natural, in this case the orator or poet\u2019s innate gifts of nature. By contrast, ars\/techne belongs to the realm of the man-made or that which man can learn.<\/p>\n<h2>Virtus<\/h2>\n<p>In his introduction Longinus discusses how one may improve one\u2019s own nature in order to achieve spiritual greatness \u2013 a powerful mind. Mastering the technique (ars\/techne) is not enough; cultivating one\u2019s innate virtue is a prerequisite for achieving sublimity. The ethical theme of the sublime, dependent on virtue, is addressed again with renewed intensity in the final chapter of the treatise.<sup id=\"footnote-74\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"74\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLonginus 1739, pp. 1-3, pp. 18-27. Heath 2012, pp. 20-21 on &amp;rdquo;The Ethics of Sublimity&amp;rdquo;.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">74<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Here, too, Longinus shows himself to be a Platonic thinker.<sup id=\"footnote-75\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"75\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nRussell 1964, introduction p. xxii.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">75<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The concept of virtue \u2013 Latin <em>virtus<\/em>, Italian <em>virt\u00fa<\/em> \u2013 denotes a wide range of meanings that go far beyond the connotations evoked by the word today. In antiquity the word held the meaning under consideration in Plato\u2019s <em>The Republic<\/em>.<sup id=\"footnote-76\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"76\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nPlato, <em>The Republic<\/em>, 4:427ff.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">76<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In Salvator Rosa\u2019s day it became a key concept in the definition of a new ideal artist figure because it has to do with a person\u2019s magnanimity, vast intelligence, talent, and exemplary manner of thought and action.<sup id=\"footnote-77\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"77\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nVasari 2004, pp. 274f.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">77<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The dimension of virtue becomes particularly evident in Longinus\u2019s concept of the sublime in the last chapter of his treatise, which bears the title \u201dThe Scarcity of sublime Writers accounted for\u201d.<sup id=\"footnote-78\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"78\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLonginus 1739, pp. 102-108; regarding the famous dialogue in the last chapter, see Till 2006, p. 98.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">78<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The chapter is written as a dialogue conducted with an unnamed (Stoic?) philosopher who is speaking to an assembled audience when he is interrupted by Longinus\u2019s first-person narrator. They discuss the reasons behind the decadence of the day: is it, as the philosopher states, due to the loss of public rhetoric as a result of the democratic form of government? Or is it, as Longinus states in his countering thesis, a general ethical-moral decline that will automatically prompt a decline in <em>H\u00fdpsos <\/em>(the sublime)? This discussion was a recurring theme in literature at the time.<sup id=\"footnote-79\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"79\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nTill 2006, p. 98.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">79<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Longinus presents the position that the corrupted state of genius might have more to do with an inner state of mind than with external factors. Our internal war, the urges of mind and body, prevents the sublime from coming to fruition. Among these urges he particularly points to greed and extravagance as the vices that lead mankind into the worst kind of slavery.<sup id=\"footnote-80\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"80\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLonginus 1739, p. 105.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">80<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Longinus tells the philosopher and the assembly that he has given the matter a lot of thought and has arrived at the conclusion that those who worship money cannot protect their souls against the vices that are so closely associated with wealth, because extravagance will always be its companion. With these follow the other progeny of wealth: ostentation, vanity and luxury.<sup id=\"footnote-81\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"81\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nLonginus 1739, p. 106.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">81<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0These vices give birth to tyrants and makes the soul groan with pain under the weight of insolence, injustice and the most arrogant of impertinence. The corrupted state spreads like a disease, dulling virtue and the facilities of the soul, and the spirit is lost. Longinus continues his speech by stating that when man has become so preoccupied with the mortal, worthless part of himself, when he has stopped cultivating virtue and polishing what is truly noble, which is the soul, then reason and genius will fall into ruin. To him, it is the soaring flight of the soul \u2013 set free and cultivated by years of toil \u2013 that paves the way for the not only completely excellent, but also exalted and sublime performance.<\/p>\n<h2>Vasari\u2019s art theory concepts<\/h2>\n<p>In sixteenth century Italian painting, sublimity was associated partly with grandeur and magnificence.<sup id=\"footnote-82\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"82\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nGiorgio Vasari: <em>Kunstgeschichte und Kunsttheorie<\/em>, introduction, comments and glossary of concepts by Matteo Burioni and Sabine Feser, Verlag Klaus Wagenbach, Berlin 2004, p. 209. In the present article Vasari is used as a reference to early modern art theory&amp;rsquo;s understanding of the concept of the sublime and all the other closely related concepts associated with that concept. The choice rests on the fact that an interesting link between Vasari&amp;rsquo;s texts and Longinus&amp;rsquo;s concept of the sublime has been pointed out, see Hana Gr\u00fcndler in: <em>Translations of the Sublime<\/em>, 2012, pp. 83-116.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">82<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0This grandeur might concern the artist\u2019s skill in terms of style, the scale of the format, the wealth of detail, the poses of the figures or a particular colour scheme \u2013 but it might also reside in breaking rules. Sublimity was associated with the experience of that which leaves you breathless with awe, but which also evokes a sense of enigma. The perception of the sublime was closely associated with a redefinition of the craft of painting within the social fabric, and during the Renaissance painting moved up the rungs of the ladder so that it was no longer regarded as a trade, but as one of the free arts, <em>artes liberales<\/em>. Painting became intellectualised, and so artists won access to the intellectual elite of society.<\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 966px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig.7_durer_melancholia_kksgb4589.jpg\" width=\"966\" height=\"1200\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 7. <\/strong>Albrecht D\u00fcrer: <em>Melancolia I<\/em>. 1514. Copperplate. 255 x 204 mm. The Royal Collection of Graphic Art, National Gallery of Denmark, inv. no. KKSgb4589.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/zero\/1.0\/deed.da\">public domain<\/a>,\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/www.smk.dk\/en\/\">National Gallery of Denmark<\/a>.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>With the artist biographies in Vasari\u2019s <em>Le Vite<\/em> we become familiar with a range of art theory concepts that helped define\u00a0the new type of artist to which Salvator Rosa refers in the stanzas from the satire <em>Invidia <\/em>quoted at the beginning of this article. In Salvator Rosa\u2019s time these concepts remained valid. One of the central concepts for his ambitions as a painter was that of <em>nobilt\u00e1<\/em> \u2013 a particular excellence that a work of art can only possess if its creator has remarkable natural (i.e. inborn) abilities.<sup id=\"footnote-83\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"83\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nFor a definition of the concept, see Vasari 2004, pp. 185f.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">83<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The concept of nobilt\u00e1 is associated with aesthetic and ethical parameters such as <em>grazia<\/em> \u2013 the grace of a work of art and spiritual artistic freedom; <em>bellezza<\/em> \u2013 a perfect exterior and interior beauty of the soul, which can be expressed in the appearance of a figure;\u00a0 <em>facilit\u00e0<\/em> \u2013 facility, ease, a gracefully effortless manner of painting. Another concept closely associated with that of nobilt\u00e1 is the aforementioned concept of <em>virt\u00fa<\/em>, which had far more wide-ranging meaning in Salvator Rosa\u2019s own day than it does today.<sup id=\"footnote-84\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"84\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nVasari 2004, pp. 274f.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">84<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Virt\u00fa was an essential concept for the new artist identity because it encompassed, as has already been touched upon, a range of traits that are innate, given by nature irrespective of ancestry, inheritance and wealth. Virt\u00fa was also, as we shall see, of key importance to the idea of genius and the definition of the sublime.<\/p>\n<h2>Melankoli &#8211; virt\u00fa &#8211; oscurit\u00e1<\/h2>\n<p>Melancholy found little favour with the ancient Stoics, for it might escalate and become paralysing, impeding the free flow of creativity.<sup id=\"footnote-85\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"85\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nKlibansky, Erwin Panofsky and Fritz Saxl: <em>Saturn and Melancholy &amp;ndash; Studies in the History of Natural Philosophy, Religion, and Art,<\/em> Nelson, London 1964, pp. 42-43.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">85<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0During the Renaissance, the Reformation theologian Philipp Melanchthon (1497\u20131560) also described the melancholic temperament in negative terms. The Renaissance and Baroque eras\u2019 positive concept of creative melancholia takes its starting point in a passage in the pseudo-Aristotelian treatise <em>Problems<\/em>, claiming that all great men are melancholics.<sup id=\"footnote-86\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"86\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nKlibansky, Erwin Panofsky and Fritz Saxl 1964, p. 42; Murray, Oxford 1989, p. 10.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">86<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The ability to think creatively, to be ingenious and truly distinctive was even seen to be governed by and predicated on the melancholic temperament. The seeds of this positive view of the dark temperament may also have resided in Christianity\u2019s appreciation of the asceticism of monastic life.<\/p>\n<p>The first artist to incorporate the melancholic temperament in a positive depiction of the artist self is the German Renaissance artist Albrecht D\u00fcrer (1471\u00ad\u20131521). In his famous engraving <em>Melancolia I<\/em> (1514, The Royal Collection of Graphic Art, the National Gallery of Denmark) he created a personification of Geometry (one of the free arts) and Melancholy in a single figure. <strong>[fig. 7]<\/strong> Knowing that D\u00fcrer was keen on measurements, proportions, harmonious numbers and central perspective, as is evident in his treatise <em>Underweysung der Messung<\/em> from 1525, the leap from the engraving\u2019s allegorical composition to D\u00fcrer\u2019s ideal self-image as a creative artist is short.<sup id=\"footnote-87\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"87\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nThe first exemplary iconological interpretation of Albrecht D\u00fcrer&amp;rsquo;s famous print, see Erwin Panofsky and Fritz Saxl: <em>D\u00fcrers &amp;lsquo;Melencolia &amp;middot; I&amp;rsquo;: Eine quellen- und typengeschichtliche Untersuchung<\/em> (Studien der Bibliothek Warburg, 2), B. G. Teubner, Leipzig and Berlin 1923; and the later, expanded and English edition Klibansky, Erwin Panofsky and Fritz Saxl 1964, pp. 317-373. According to the authors, D\u00fcrer was, with his belief in &amp;lsquo;divine inspiration&amp;rsquo;, in opposition to early Italian Renaissance figures such as Alberti and Leonardo da Vinci, who wanted to see artistic creativity as rational and bound by rules because this would place painting on a par with the free arts. The full title of Albrecht D\u00fcrer&amp;rsquo;s treatise is <em>Underweysung Der Messung Mit Dem Zirkel Und Richtscheyt in Linien, Ebnen Und Gantzen Corporen<\/em>, Nuremberg 1525.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">87<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0There can be little doubt that D\u00fcrer placed himself in the slipstream of Plato and Longinus when he ascribed the deepest source of the artistic imagination to an ability that could not be learned, but only achieved through the gift of inspiration, which was the reserve of just a few.<sup id=\"footnote-88\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"88\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nKlibansky, Erwin Panofsky and Fritz Saxl 1964, pp. 360-365. Longinus&amp;rsquo;s <em>On the Sublime<\/em> and his theory concerning the innate (as opposed to learned) sources of the sublime is not part of the Klibansky, Erwin Panofsky and Fritz Saxl analysis.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">88<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 1200px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig.8_rembrandt_selvportraet_kksgb8931.jpg\" width=\"1200\" height=\"1144\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 8.<\/strong> Rembrandt van Rijn: <em>Sheet of studies: head of Rembrandt, beggar couple, heads of old man and old woman, etc.<\/em> c. 1631. Etching. 10 x 10,5 mm. The Royal Collection of Graphic Art, National Gallery of Denmark, inv. no. KKSgb8931. <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/zero\/1.0\/deed.da\">public domain<\/a>,\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/www.smk.dk\/en\/\">National Gallery of Denmark<\/a>.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>If we consider parallels closer to Salvator Rosa\u2019s own day one might point to Rembrandt (1606\u201369). The Dutch master believed that the melancholic mind was also the hallmark of the creative imagination. In several painted or etched self-portraits he addressed the darkly sombre mind as an aspect of the artist identity, depicting it through metaphorical use of shadow.<sup id=\"footnote-89\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"89\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nPerry Chapman: <em>Rembrandt&amp;#39;s Self-portraits &amp;ndash; a Study in Seventeenth-Century Identity<\/em>. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey 1990, pp. 21-33; Chapman includes references to Robert Burton and Albrecht D\u00fcrer and brings together a range of painted and etched self-portraits by Rembrandts as examples of this melancholic identity, figs. 23, 26, 27.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">89<\/a><\/sup><strong>\u00a0[fig. 8]<\/strong> In an etching featuring a range of different sketches seemingly brought together at random, the smouldering darkness conjured up by the needle includes a shadowy self-portrait amongst an array of beggars and miserable figures. It is possible that Salvator Rosa was familiar with the master prints of both D\u00fcrer and Rembrandt.<\/p>\n<p>Wallace has demonstrated that in his allegorical self-portrait and the painting of Democritus, Salvator Rosa entered into a dialogue with an engraving by Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione (1609-64) from around 1645\u201348.<sup id=\"footnote-90\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"90\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nWallace 1968, p. 21, fig. 5. The print can be found in the Royal Collection of Graphic Arts, inv. no. G:63,19.&amp;nbsp;The print can be found in the Royal Collection of Graphic Art, inv. no. G:63,19. Chris Fischer has explored the relation between Castiglione&amp;rsquo;s engraving and Salvator Rosa&amp;rsquo;s Democritus painting, in partilcular Salvator Rosa&amp;rsquo;s engraving after the painting, see: Chris Fischer: <em>Ruinmani,<\/em>&amp;nbsp;Lommebog 68,&amp;nbsp;Den Kongelige Kobberstiksamling, Statens Museum for Kunst. Copenhagen1995, pp. 4-8.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">90<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0<strong>[fig. 9]\u00a0<\/strong>The engraving carries the inscription \u201cUbi Inletabilitas Ibi Virtus\u201d (\u201cWhere there is melancholy there is virtue\u201d). A female personification of Melancholy is shown surrounded by symbols of science. A dog, an animal that was often linked to the melancholic temperament within the cosmological worldview of the era, is tied to the monument at which the woman sits. In this work, Benedetto Castiglione associates the melancholic temperament with virt\u00fa.<\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 598px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig.9_castiglione_ubi_inletabilitas_kksgb7446.jpg\" width=\"598\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 9.<\/strong> Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione: <em>Ubi Inletabilitas Ibi Virtus<\/em>. c. 1645-48. Etching. 216 x 112 mm. The Royal Collection of Graphic Art, National Gallery of Denmark, inv. no. KKSgb7446.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/zero\/1.0\/deed.da\">public domain<\/a>,\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/www.smk.dk\/en\/\">National Gallery of Denmark<\/a>.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>In Salvator Rosa\u2019s day one would sometimes see a correlation between the positive view of melancholy and a particular manner of painting that was dominated by dark colours and an absence of crisp contours.<sup id=\"footnote-91\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"91\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\nVasari 2004, pp. 240f. and pp. 197f.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">91<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0This manner of painting was the so-called <em>oscurit\u00e1, <\/em>an extreme version of <em>chiaroscuro. <\/em>Both techniques leave the spectator with a sense that he or she has not seen everything; what is hidden in the darkness? This enigmatic quality might also extend to the subject matter \u2013 what is the painting truly about?<sup id=\"footnote-92\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"92\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3336\" data-sup-value=\"\n<em>Chiaroscuro<\/em>, in the sense of the distribution of light and shadow in the scene, became particularly prominent in the seventeenth century. This distinctive manner of painting became a means of creating unity in the composition and of achieving a particular expressive or metaphorical quality. For an interpretation of the concept of <em>chiaroscuro<\/em> in Baroque art, see Maria Rzepinska: &amp;ldquo;Tenebrism in Baroque Painting and its Ideological Background&amp;rdquo;, <em>artibus et historiae<\/em>, 13, 1986, pp. 91-112.\n\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3336\">92<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<h2>Conclusion<\/h2>\n<p>What might Salvator Rosa have been thinking when using terms such as sublimity and sublime subject matter? The objective of this article was to elucidate this question by reviewing those parts of Longinus\u2019s treatise that address ethics and the concept of virt\u00fa, thereby pointing to the complex connections that Salvator Rosa saw, consciously or subconsciously, between the melancholy, passive Democritus, the ascetic, active Diogenes and the Longinian sublime. Might one say that the Democritus and Diogenes paintings manifest the sublime as an artistic programme? Might one say that the paintings concern themselves with the sublime, virt\u00fa, melancholy, oscurit\u00e1 and genius? Perhaps the National Gallery\u2019s philosopher duo might also be seen as a reflection of Salvator Rosa\u2019s own ideal self-image. Salvator Rosa was familiar with the thoughts on ethics and virt\u00fa current at the time, perhaps not directly from their original source, but certainly through the discourse of learned friends and through the general incorporation and \u2018Christianisation\u2019 of key concepts of ancient philosophy via neo-Stoicism.<\/p>\n<p>As one stands before Salvator Rosa\u2019s pendants at the National Gallery one is struck by how dark the two paintings are. Both compositions are shrouded in oscurit\u00e1, demanding a little extra from the spectator\u2019s visual faculties and requiring them to accustom the eyes to observing all the details in the dark areas. Much of the palette is made up of variants of black mixed with other colours, combining to form a very rich, dusky colour scheme. The paintings also demand a great deal of prior knowledge on the part of the spectator: unless you are very well versed in the life stories of the two philosophers, the themes are not immediately apparent as the artist has not used well-established iconography. This contributes to the overall oscurit\u00e1 in the sense of mystery \u2013 a key concept within the terminology of the sublime presented in Vasari\u2019s artist biographies, and one that was closely related to the melancholic temperament, the hallmark of artists and philosophers alike. This \u2018learned\u2019 approach not only identifies Salvator Rosa as a painter-philosopher; it also requires special insight on the part of the spectator.<\/p>\n<p>The composition places figures, tree trunks and darkness in a harmonious interplay of details and totality, thereby drawing on the rhetorical device of <em>amplificatio<\/em>, amplification, which according to Longinus is one of the paths orators can take as they pursue sublimity. Another element crucial to our understanding of Salvator Rosa\u2019s philosopher duo is the mutually complementary concepts of virt\u00fa, melancholy, oscurit\u00e1, genius and sublimity. The philosopher motif in itself represents the melancholic temperament, especially Democritus with his smiling yet sad expression. He can be said to be doubly afflicted, for the object of his own studies is the anatomy of that very temperament.<\/p>\n<p>This study of the National Gallery\u2019s philosopher duo has given rise to the hypothesis that Salvator Rosa envisioned his juxtaposition of the meditative Democritus and the ascetic Diogenes because he regarded the two Greek philosophers as images of his own Stoic artist persona; a self-image where concepts such as nobilt\u00e1 and virt\u00fa were omnipresent in his endeavours to create sublime art. The grandeur of thought unfolds itself through form and content. Perhaps Salvator Rosa was aware of Longinus\u2019s treatise, of his thoughts on the sublime and on how virt\u00fa was a cornerstone of that concept. Salvator Rosa wanted to create sublime art when he secluded himself at Monte Rufoli, an artist-philosopher eager to do his very best.<\/p>\n<p>So where can one see Salvator Rosa\u2019s sublimity in the pendants? In the construction of the ethical-heroic philosopher motif and in the choice of juxtaposing Democritus and Diogenes; in a special principle of composition that adopts the rhetorical device of amplificatio; in the interpretation of oscurit\u00e1, which refers partly to a severely restricted palette of dark colours, to an enigmatic iconography and to a dark temperament characteristic of the artist and philosopher as types. \u00a0\u25a2<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em>Post scriptum: I wish to acknowledge the Novo Nordisk Foundation for funding during the preparation of this article<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Translation\u00a0by Ren\u00e9 Lauritsen<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>The top image is a detail of\u00a0Salvator Rosa: The Genius of Salvator Rosa. <a href=\"http:\/\/www.nga.gov\/content\/ngaweb.html\">National Gallery of Art<\/a>, Washington, see fig. 6.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Can Salvator Rosa\u2019s paintings of Democritus and Diogenes be seen as reflections of the artist\u2019s self-image as a Stoic painter-philosopher and of his endeavour to create sublime art? This complicated matter is elucidated in the present article.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":3189,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[46],"class_list":["post-3336","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-articles","tag-european-baroque"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Salvator Rosa\u2019s Democritus and Diogenes in Copenhagen - Perspective<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/salvator-rosas-democritus-and-diogenes-in-copenhagen\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Salvator Rosa\u2019s Democritus and Diogenes in Copenhagen - Perspective\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Can Salvator Rosa\u2019s paintings of Democritus and Diogenes be seen as reflections of the artist\u2019s self-image as a Stoic painter-philosopher and of his endeavour to create sublime art? 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