It’s hardly a secret that Rome has some great churches.
In fact, Ernest Bevan thought they had too many, and not enough hospitals, when he visited Rome in the fifties. Well maybe they have a few more hospitals now, but they certainly aren’t as photogenic as the churches.
I have my favourites which I like to pop into to fire off a few photographs.
Santa Maria Maddalena in the eponymous piazza is one of them. The only rococco church in Rome apparently, though it looks pretty baroque to me. Another is Santa Maria dell'Orazione e Morte, (Saint Mary of Prayer and Death) in Via Giulia, which is on one of my Photosleuth Tours’ routes. A pretty spooky church, and with a name like that it couldn't be otherwise.
The present baroque church was built in 1737 replacing an earlier XVl century one. It was run by a fraternity that collected the dead bodies of unknown people found in the countryside to give them a Christian burial. An essential requisite if you wanted to go to heaven!
Skulls and other symbols, such as hour glasses, a favourite way of reminding all God fearing folk that time marches inexorably forward and that we're all mortal, adorn the façade and the interior, and on either side of the main door two macabre engravings remind passers by of their mortality. The one on the right depicts death sitting comfortably on a bench with an hourglass in hand patiently waiting for a sick man to die.
Death waits patiently for some poor soul to breathe his last. Almost like gathering fallen apples! The inscription says “Alms for the poor dead that are found in the country.”
Rarely open except for Saturday evening and Sunday masses, so I was surprised to find it open one day in the week and nipped inside and took these photos. Inside it’s very dark so I used an ISO rating of 1600, and still had to shoot at 1/15 of a second.
Although there’s a lot of gold in the ornamentation the atmosphere is pretty sombre so I converted some of the images to black and white. I just love the way the balustrades curve around forming serried layers going right up to the dome.
It seems like The Phantom of the Opera could appear at any moment.
Amazing pictures. Thanks for bringing them to us via this wonderful blog!
RispondiEliminaWe have some similar 'spooky' places in Naples that I've found, including the Church of the Souls of Purgatory (replete with skulls and femurs at the front) and the San Gaudioso where the Dominicans took the spines of corpses and used them for beautiful wall frescoes.
Saluti!
Barbara
http://theespressobreak.blogspot.com
I like the photos !
RispondiEliminaThanks Barbara. I shall have to come down and have a look at the Church of the Souls of Purgatory. In Rome there is of course the Cappuccins' crypt in Via Veneto under church of Santa Maria della Concezione dei Cappuccini decorated throughout with the bones of past cappuccin monks. Which is very creepy.
RispondiEliminaAmazing pics!! I miss so much my beloved Italy!! I'l follow you... :)
RispondiElimina