For the school see Gesu School.
The Church of the Gesù
(; in Italian, Chiesa del Sacro Nome di Gesù
, or "Church of the Holy Name of Jesus") is the mother church of the Society of Jesus, known as the Jesuits, an order of the Roman Catholic Church. Its facade recognized as "the first truly baroque façade" [1] it was the model for innumerable Jesuit churches all over the world, especially in the Americas. The Church of the Gesù is located in the Piazza del Gesù in Rome.
First conceived in 1551 by Saint Ignatius of Loyola, the founder of the Jesuits Society of Jesus, and active during the Protestant Reformation and the subsequent Catholic Reformation, the Gesù was also the home of the Superior General of the Society of Jesus until the suppression of the order in 1773. [2]
Although Michelangelo offered to design the church for free, the endeavor was funded by Alessandro Cardinal Farnese, grandson of Pope Paul III, who had authorized the founding of the Society of Jesus. Ultimately, the main architects involved in the construction were Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola and Giacomo della Porta, whose revision of Vignola's façade design has offered architectural historians opportunities for a close comparison between Vignola's balanced composition in three superimposed planes and Della Porta's dynamically fused tension bound by its strong vertical elements, contrasts that have sharpened architectural historians' perceptions for the last century (Whitman 1970:108). Vignola's rejected design remained readily available to architects and prospective patrons in an engraving of 1573.
Construction of the church began in 1568 to Vignola's design, and, since it set a pattern for Jesuit churches that lasted into the twentieth century, its innovations require enumerating. The Jesuit Mother Church was built according to the new requirements formulated during the Council of Trent. There is no narthex in which to linger: the visitor is projected immediately into the body of the church, a single nave without aisles, so that the congregation is assembled and attention is focused on the high altar. In place of aisles there are a series of identical interconnecting chapels behind arched openings, [3] to which entrance is controlled by decorative balustrades with gates. Transepts are reduced to stubs that emphasize the altars of their end walls.
The plan synthesizes the central planning of the High Renaissance, [4] expressed by the grand scale of the dome and the prominent piers of the crossing, with the extended nave that had been characteristic of the preaching churches, a type of church established by Franciscans and Dominicans since the thirteenth century. Everywhere inlaid polychrome marble revetments are relieved by gilding, frescoed barrel vaults enrich the ceiling and rhetorical white stucco and marble sculptures break out of their tectonic framing. The example of the Gesù did not completely eliminate the traditional basilica church with aisles, but after its example was set, experiments in Baroque church floor plans, oval or Greek cross, were largely confined to smaller churches and chapels.
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Interior decoration
The most striking feature of the interior decoration is the ceiling
fresco is the grandiose
Triumph of the Name of Jesus
by
Giovanni Battista Gaulli. Gaulli also frescoed the cupola.
The first chapel to the right of the nave is the
Cappella di Sant'Andrea
, so named because the church previously on the site, which had to be demolished to make way for the Jesuit church, was dedicated to
St. Andrew. All the painted works were completed by the Florentine
Agostino Ciampelli. The frescoes on the arches depict the male martyrs saints Pancrazio, Celso, Vito, and Agapito, while the pilasters depict the female martyred saints Cristina, Margherita, Anastasia, Cecilia, Lucy, and Agatha. The ceiling is frescoed with the
Glory of the Virgin surrounded by martyred saints Clemente, Ignazio di Antiochia, Cipriano, and Policarpo
The lunettes are frescoed with
Saints Agnes & Lucy face the storm
and
St. Stephen and the Deacon St. Lawrence
. The altarpiece depicts the
Martyrdom of St Andrew
.
The second chapel to the right is the
Cappella della Passione
, with lunette frescoes depicting scenes of the Passion:
Jesus in Gesthemane
,
Kiss of Judas
, and six canvases on the pilasters:
Christ at the column
Christ before the guards
,
Christ before Herod
,
Ecce Homo
,
Exit to Calvary
, and
Crucifixion
. The altarpiece of the
Madonna with child and beatified Jesuits
, replaces the original altarpiece by
Scipione Pulzone.
[5] The program of paintings is indepted to
Giuseppe Valeriani and painted by
Gaspare Celio. The altar has a bronze urn with the remains of 18th century Jesuit
St. Giuseppe Pignatelli, canonized by
Pius XII in 1954. Medals on the wall commemorate P. Jan Roothaan (1785-1853) and P. Pedro Arrupe (1907-1991), the 21st and 28th
Superior General of the Society of Jesus.
The third chapel to the right is the
Cappella degli Angeli
has a ceiling fresco of the
Coronation of Virgin
and altarpiece of
Angels worshiping Trinity
by
Federico Zuccari. He also painted the canvases on the walls,
Defeat of rebel angels
on right, and
Angels liberate souls from Purgatory
on the left. Other frescoes represent Heaven, Hell, and Purgatory. The angles in the niches of the pilasters were completed by both
Silla Longhi and
Flaminio Vacca.
The larger
Saint Francis Xavier Chapel
in the right transept, was designed by
Pietro da Cortona, originally commissioned by cardinal Giovanni Francesco Negroni. The polychromatic marbles enclose a stucco relief representing
Francis Xavier welcomed to heaven by angels
. The altarpiece shows the
Death of Francis Xavier in Shangchuan Island
by
Carlo Maratta. The arches are decorated with scenes from the life of the saint, including
Apotheosis of the saint
in the center,
Crucifixion
,
Saint lost at sea
, and at left,
Baptism of an Indian princess
, by
Giovanni Andrea Carlone. The silver reliquary conserves part of the saint's right arm, his other remains are interred in the Jesuit church in
Goa.
The last chapel on the far end of the nave, to the right of the high altar, is the chapel of the
Sacro Cuore
(holy heart of Jesus).
The sacristy is on the right. In the presbytery is a bust of
Cardinal Bellarmine by
Bernini.
The first chapel to the left, originally dedicated to the apostles, is now the
Cappella di San Francesco Borgia
, the former Spanish Duke of Gandia, who renounced his title to enter the Jesuit order, and become its third "Preposito generale". The altarpiece,
Saint Francesco Borgia in Prayer
by
Pozzo, is surrounded by works by Gagliardi. Ceiling frescoes of (Pentecost) and lunettes (left
Martyrdom of St. Peter
, to sides
Faith and Hope
and right,
Martyrdom of St. Paul
with allgorical Religion and Charity are works
Nicolò Circignani (Il Pomarancio).
Pier Francesco Mola painted the walls, on left with
St. Peter in jail baptizes saints Processo & Martiniano
, to right is the
Conversion of St. Paul
. There are four monuments by
Marchesi Ferrari.
The second chapel on the left is dedicated to the Nativity, and called
Cappella della Sacra Famiglia
, commissioned by patron cardinal Cerri, who worked for the Barberini family. The altarpiece of the nativity by
Circignani. In the roof, the
Celestial celebration on the nativity of Christ
, on the pinnacles are David, Isaiah, Zaccarias e Baruch, on the right lunette, an
Annunciation to shepherds
, and on the left, a
Massacre of the innocents
. Also are frescoes on
Presentation of Jesus to the Temple
and
Adoration by Magi
. Four allegorical statues represent Temperance, Prudence on right; and Strength and Justice.
The third chapel to the left is the
Cappella della Santissima Trinità
, commissioned initially by the clerical patron
Pirro Taro, is named due to the main altarpiece by
Francesco Bassano the Younger. The frescoes completed mainly by three painters and assistants during 1588-1589; the exact attributions are uncertain, but it is said the Creation, the angels on the pilasters, and the designs of some of the frescoes by the Florentine Jesuit painter,
Giovanni Battista Fiammeri. Painted with assistants was the Baptism of Christ on the right wall. The
Transfiguration
on the left wall and the
Abraham with three angels
on the right oval were by
Durante Alberti.
God the Father behind a chorus of angels
in the left oval and in the pinnacles, angels with God’s attributes, were completed by
Ventura Salimbeni. The reliquary on the altar holds the right arm of the polish Jesuit St.
Andrew Bobola, martyred in 1657 and canonized by
Pius XI in 1938.
The imposing
St. Ignatius Chapel
is the churche's masterpiece, designed by
Andrea Pozzo houses the saint's tomb. The altar by Pozzo shows the
Trinity
, while four
lapis lazuli-veneered columns enclose the colossal statue of the saint by
Pierre Legros. The latter is a copy, probably by Adamo Tadolini working in the studio of
Antonio Canova, however:
Pope Pius VI had the original melted down, ostensibly to pay the war reparations to
Napoleon, as established by the
Treaty of Tolentino, 1797. Originally the project was designed by Giacomo della Porta , then by Cortona ; but ultimately Pozzo won a public contest to design the altar. A canvas of the Saint receives the monogram with the name of Jesus from the celestial resurrected Christ attributed to Pozzo. The is a bronze urn by
Algardi that holds the body of the saint, below are two groups of statues where
Religion defeats heresy
by
Legros, and
Faith defeats idolatry
by
Jean-Baptiste Théodon.
The last chapel on the far end of the nave, to the left of the high altar, is the
Chapel of the Madonna della Strada
. The name derives from a medieval icon, once found in a now-lost Church in the piazza Altieri, venerated by sant'Ignazio. The interior is designed and decorated by
Giuseppe Valeriani, who painted scenes from the
life of the Virgin. The cupola frescoes were painted by G.P. Pozzi.
Legacy
The Church of the Gesù was the model of various churches of the Society of Jesus throughout the world, starting from the
Church of St.Michael in
Munich (1583-1597) and the
Corpus Christi Church in
Niasviž (1587-1593). Various parishes also share the name of the Church of the Gesù.
Notes
- Nathan T. Whitman, "Roman Tradition and the Aedicular Façade" ''The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians'' '''29'''.2 (May 1970), (pp. 108-123) p 108.
- The church having been subsequently regained by the Jesuits, the adjacent palazzo is now a residence for Jesuit scholars from around the world studying at the Gregorian University in preparation for ordination to the priesthood.
- The Gesù's scheme of wide arched bays defined by paired pilasters has its origin in Alberti's Sant'Andrea, Milan, begun in 1470.
- The exemplar is Bramante's original plan for St. Peter's Basilica.
- now in the Metropolitan Museum of New York
References
- Nathan T. Whitman, "Roman Tradition and the Aedicular Façade" ''The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians'' '''29'''.2 (May 1970), (pp. 108-123) p 108.
- The church having been subsequently regained by the Jesuits, the adjacent palazzo is now a residence for Jesuit scholars from around the world studying at the Gregorian University in preparation for ordination to the priesthood.
- The Gesù's scheme of wide arched bays defined by paired pilasters has its origin in Alberti's Sant'Andrea, Milan, begun in 1470.
- The exemplar is Bramante's original plan for St. Peter's Basilica.
- now in the Metropolitan Museum of New York