Blockbuster: Caravaggio 2025, Palazzo Barberini


Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio—known far and wide as Caravaggio—was quite the enfant terrible. Highlighting his lengthy rap sheet: He killed a man. Let’s just say it wasn’t his first fight. Violent altercations appear to have been something of a hobby for the immensely influential artist, who was born in Milan in 1571 and made his name in Rome. There he built a thriving studio, winning commissions from rich patrons who also wielded their leverage to get him out of trouble. (Plus ça change… )
The incessant drama of his life was matched only by the intensity of his canvases, which are alive with wild-eyed men, gentle youths, and serene saints (sometimes modeled by well-known prostitutes). Rome’s Palazzo Barberini, in collaboration with Galleria Borghese, has brought together two dozen of his remarkable works this year for an exhibition that underscores the bridge he built from the late Renaissance into the Baroque period. He inspired a raft of followers, the Caravaggisti, with his extreme chiaroscuro, expressive emotions, and uncanny realism. A rare bonus for ticketholders: access to his only mural, Jupiter, Neptune and Pluto, which he painted on a ceiling in Villa Ludovisi for a powerful cardinal.
After the homicide, Caravaggio fled to Naples, then to Malta, to escape a sentence of death by beheading. Little coincidence that severed heads became a frequently recurring motif in his paintings—some, as in David With the Head of Goliath, bearing his own tortured visage. Caravaggio didn’t make it to his 39th birthday, and sketchy details surrounding his death leave open the possibility that his enemies exacted their revenge. But you still have time to hotfoot it to Rome: The show closes July 6.
Above: An installation view of Caravaggio 2025 at Palazzo Barberini. From left: Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, Giuditta e Oloferne, 1598-1602, and Marta and e Maddalena, 1598, both oil on canvas. Opposite: Ecce Homo, 1606-1609, oil on canvas.