덴두르 신전은 4월 26일 일요일부터 5월 8일 금요일까지 휴관합니다. 메트로폴리탄 미술관 5번가 본관은 5월 4일 월요일에 휴관합니다.

방문 계획을 세우세요
가능한 한 빨리 이 페이지를 번역하기 위해 노력하고 있습니다. 이해해 주셔서 감사합니다.

Roz Chast on Italian Renaissance Painting

This episode is part of The Artist Project, a series in which artists respond to works of art in The Met collection.
Italian Renaissance painting of the Virgin Mary in a blue cloak and red dress seated beside a column, gently supporting the nude Christ Child as he writes in a small open book, with a walled city visible through an arched window behind them.

Madonna and Child, ca. 1483–84. Filippino Lippi (Italian, 1457–1504). Tempera, oil, and gold on wood, 32 x 23 1/2 in. (81.3 x 59.7 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, The Jules Bache Collection, 1949 (49.7.10)

Sometimes a narrative will occur to me that is funny.

My name's Roz Chast. I'm a cartoonist for The New Yorker.

I love this era because it's before everything got so perfect and all of the rules of perspective are in place. They're more fanciful. I like the flatness, I like the sort of made up backgrounds, the attempts at architecture that don't always work out, the attempts at anatomy that don't always work out. I love it!

And sometimes a narrative will occur to me that is funny, especially in this painting. They're washing the newborn baby, but in the foreground there's just these groups of women, some of whom seem to be pregnant, and they're like, "Yeah, I'm about, you know, seven months." And then in the background there's a woman having some sort of beauty treatment, I think. It's kind of like a mud bath—I don't even know. And then this huge architectural thing happening that is not in the subject matter at all.

The fact that they're strangely painted helps me interpret them strangely. Like, this one with the UFO coming down. BING! BING! BING! I just love that sound effect. And he has been knocked off his horse by this beam from the UFO, and then I think what's going to happen next is this pink house is going to come down from space. They're just all astonished, but I think it has something to do with the UFO.

In a lot of these paintings I'm paying attention to the elements that are not religious. In the foreground is all the, you know, religious stuff, but in the background there's just this everyday stuff of somebody bringing wheat to market.

I often think about how rare it was for people to look at images in a world where they weren't, you know, constantly bombarded. I don't even know if they had mirrors and regular people didn't have, like, portraits.

In a lot of these paintings there's a lot more in it than needs to be. That's to me what draws you in, what makes it feel real. Walt Disney said that to make a cartoon look realistic, you have to put more in the scene than somebody can see. It's not just a schematic. I mean, I like to feel, when I'm doing a cartoon, that yes, there's the joke and the people, but I also want to make the person feel that it's real—that, like, if they opened up the drawer they would know what was in the drawer.

What I like about it is knowing how hard it is to draw. I sort of can see, in some these cases, the artist trying to work it out. It's more like a conversation—I think maybe it's because I can hear the voice of the painter. The painter seems more human. It seems less mechanical to me. There's a sort of tension between what they know and what they don't know. It's like, "it's too complicated for me to paint, so I'm going to make up a way of painting it that will work," and that's what I think I like.


Contributors

Roz Chast, born in 1954, is an American cartoonist.


A man wearing glasses, gesturing with his hand, stands in a paintings gallery.
Video
Artist Spencer Finch reflects on William Michael Harnett's The Artist's Letter Rack in this episode of The Artist Project.
June 22, 2015
A woman in a black shirt with hair pulled back stands in a gallery with glass cases displaying gold objects.
Video
Artist Teresita Fernández reflects on pre-Columbian gold in this episode of The Artist Project.
June 22, 2015
Man with shoulder-length dreadlocks wearing a black shirt stands in a museum gallery displaying African sculptural objects.
Video
Artist Willie Cole reflects on Ci Wara sculpture in this episode of The Artist Project.
June 22, 2015

A slider containing 5 items.
Press the down key to skip to the last item.
The Birth of the Virgin, Fra Carnevale (Bartolomeo di Giovanni Corradini)  Italian, Tempera and oil on wood
Fra Carnevale (Bartolomeo di Giovanni Corradini)
1467
The Nativity, Francesco di Giorgio Martini  Italian, Tempera on wood
Francesco di Giorgio Martini
The Conversion of Saint Paul, Benozzo Gozzoli (Benozzo di Lese di Sandro)  Italian, Tempera on wood
Benozzo Gozzoli (Benozzo di Lese di Sandro)
Totila before Saint Benedict, Benozzo Gozzoli (Benozzo di Lese di Sandro)  Italian, Tempera on wood
Benozzo Gozzoli (Benozzo di Lese di Sandro)
Madonna and Child, Filippino Lippi  Italian, Tempera, oil, and gold on wood
Filippino Lippi
ca. 1483–84