“Art is a lie that
makes us realize truth” Picasso.
We recently returned from a whirlwind trip to Italy that touched
on many of the unique sights this country has to offer. Late October weather
delivered cool evenings and warm cloudless days. Our tour group trekked from
the Amalfi coast along the Mediterranean Sea to Venice on the Adriatic. All
bucket lists were satisfied. Those searching for history, artwork, other
worldly photographs, religious imagery, ever-changing regional food and wine,
or simply seeking to be enveloped in the homeland of their grandparents were
all well rewarded.
On this trip, I looked forward to returning to Siena in
Tuscany where I planned to search out a series of three fresco panels painted
by Ambrogio Lorenzetti in 1338-1339. This magnificent work located in Siena’s
governmental council hall has become known as the “Allegory of Good and Bad
Government.” It was commissioned to remind the nine magistrates who governed
the Medieval Siena Republic of what constituted proper conduct as they made
their executive and legal decisions. My
goal was to determine whether this ancient allegory held lessons for our modern
democratic society following a tumultuous election.
As luck would have it, the fresco panels were under
renovation and off exhibit. Nonetheless, I learned a great deal about the
paintings and the governance of Siena in the fourteenth century. For hundreds
of years, this small city-state was able to maintain its status as a democratic
republic in the shadow of larger principalities who sought to dominate Siena’s
politics, banking and trade. The Battle
of Montaperti fought on September 4, 1260 between Florence and Siena saw the
more powerful Florentines routed. It was the bloodiest battle fought in
Medieval Italy with more than 10,000 fatalities. Each year, Siena
commemorates this victory as an important holiday.
Lorenzetti’s “Allegory of Good and Bad
Government” is a reminder that good government is characterized by Justice,
Concord, Peace and Wisdom while bad government is animated by Division,
Avarice, Fury, Vainglory and Tyranny. When good government reigns, all is well.
When bad government plagues society, the Tyrant usurps the power of the people,
and the citizens suffer.
The majestic figure in the middle of the “good government” panel,
dressed in Siena’s colors, personifies the republic itself. Lorenzetti labels
him Commune. He is telling the Siena citizens that they, not a king or tyrant,
must rule themselves. Justice
is enthroned and looking up at the figure of Wisdom, who actually supports her
impartial scales.
Concord (or
harmony) holds a rope that originates from the scales of Justice that binds her
to the citizens, making them all compatriots of the republic. The republic is safeguarded by Security, whose banner
reads: “Everyone shall go forth freely without fear.” Finally, we see
Peace. She looks serene and confident that the republic is safe. The painting demonstrates the fragile nature of
liberty. The precarious balance between state and society, between the political
elites and the citizens.
Bad
government is displayed on another panel. The Tyrant, not the Commune, rules
over the people. He has horns, tusks and crossed eyes. Justice now lies
helpless at his feet, in chains. Her equitable scales are destroyed and unable
to keep government fair and accountable.
Around the
Tyrant, Lorenzetti paints the vices that animate bad government. Avarice is the
old woman behind him, clutching her strongbox and a fisherman’s hook to pull in
her fortune. Vainglory carries a mirror. Lorenzetti warns us against
narcissistic leaders guided by ego and vanity. On the tyrant’s right, we find
Cruelty.
Treason is
represented as half lamb, half scorpion. It lulls the people into a false sense
of security and then poisons the republic. Fraud is painted with the flighty wings of a bat. On the
Tyrant’s left, Division, who is clothed in Siena’s colors, chops her body in
half with a carpenter’s saw. Fury attacks with the weapons of the mob: the
stone and knife.
In the remainder of the fresco, Lorenzetti
shows us the inevitable effects of bad government. The civic ideals celebrated
elsewhere in the room have now been destroyed. The once beautiful city is
falling to pieces. The countryside is barren; its farms are abandoned and in
flames. In the sky above, the winged figure is not Security, but Fear. Her
banner reads: “None shall pass along this road without fear of Death.”
Words cannot do justice to these amazing
paintings. They can easily be viewed online to contemplate the power of the
allegory.
These 800-year-old images are familiar to us today and bind us to
history. We see what democracy looks
like. We experience the effects of good and of bad government in our world,
just as Lorenzetti did in his life.
There
are lessons here for American democracy that should be considered. Preserving
liberty through many generations comes at a price. Citizens must do more than simply vote once a year. We have
to disrupt our own lives with civic activism so that we can prevent the amoral
accumulation of power by those who would betray our values.
Last Tuesday, the American
people were challenged to raise justice up and to support a constitutional
republic over ongoing political tribalism and violence. On November 8, voters
chose the path taken by Siena. They rejected the tyranny of election deniers and
authoritarian government. Democracy is now on track to achieve a balanced
recovery.
No comments:
Post a Comment