Jonathan Beckman
Deaths of the Artists
Perspectives
By Laurent Binet (Translated from French by Sam Taylor)
Harvill Secker 272pp £18.99
Florence in 1557 wasn’t what it used to be. Leonardo and Raphael were both dead, and Michelangelo, now an old man, had moved to Rome, burdened with the monumental task of remodelling St Peter’s. A chill had settled over the city. Duke Cosimo de’ Medici ruled with an iron grip, fearful of his mortal enemy, Piero Strozzi, who had become marshal of France under Cosimo’s cousin Catherine, queen of France. A spirit of censoriousness emanated from Cosimo’s religiose Spanish wife, Eleanor of Toledo. The High Renaissance mode had warped into Mannerism, a style of affectless polish and gymnastic contortions whose preeminent exponents in Florence were Pontormo and his pupil Bronzino.
Laurent Binet’s latest novel begins with Pontormo’s death in 1557. Over the preceding eleven years, he had been working on a series of frescos – now lost – for the church of San Lorenzo. As with Binet’s earlier book The 7th Function of Language, a caper about the traffic accident that killed Roland Barthes, the novel proceeds from the idea that the death was, in fact, a murder. There are suspects everywhere: fellow painters, insurrectionary apprentices, maybe even the duke himself. In pursuit of the perpetrator – as well as an obscene portrait of one of the Medici brood that seems, relatedly, to have disappeared from Pontormo’s house – is the prosopographer of the Renaissance and second-rate artist Giorgio Vasari, here transformed into a put-upon factotum of Cosimo.
The detective story sits easily inside the art novel: the detective and the critic are both trained to find devils in the details. Close reading of iconography can tease out the esoteric – often heretical – meaning of a painting. Robert Langdon, the Harvard-based professor of ‘symbology’ in the novels
Sign Up to our newsletter
Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.@Lit_Review
Follow Literary Review on Twitter
Twitter Feed
Russia’s recent efforts to destabilise the Baltic states have increased enthusiasm for the EU in these places. With Euroscepticism growing in countries like France and Germany, @owenmatth wonders whether Europe’s salvation will come from its periphery.
Owen Matthews - Sea of Troubles
Owen Matthews: Sea of Troubles - Baltic: The Future of Europe by Oliver Moody
literaryreview.co.uk
Many laptop workers will find Vincenzo Latronico’s PERFECTION sends shivers of uncomfortable recognition down their spine. I wrote about why for @Lit_Review
https://literaryreview.co.uk/hashtag-living
An insightful review by @DanielB89913888 of In Covid’s Wake (Macedo & Lee, @PrincetonUPress).
Paraphrasing: left-leaning authors critique the Covid response using right-wing arguments. A fascinating read.
via @Lit_Review