In 1507, at Gentile’s death, Giovanni undertook, at his brother’s dying request, to finish the “Preaching of St. Mark,” receiving as a recompense that coveted sketch-book of his father’s, from which he had adopted so many suggestions, and which, though he was the eldest, had been inherited by the legitimate son.
In the preceding year Albert Dürer had visited Venice for the second time, and Bellini had received him with great cordiality. Dürer writes, “Bellini is very old, but is still the best painter in Venice”; and adds, “The things I admired on my last visit, I now do not value at all.” Implying that he was able now to see how superior Bellini was to the hitherto more highly esteemed Vivarini.
At the very end of Bellini’s life, in 1514, the Duke of Ferrara paid him eighty-five ducats for a painting of “Bacchanals,” now at Alnwick Castle; which may be looked upon as an open confession by one who had always considered himself as a painter of distinctively religious works, that such a gay scene of feasting afforded opportunities which he could not resist, for beauty of attitude and colour; but the gods, sitting at their banquet in a sunny glade, are almost fully draped, and there is little of the abandon which was affected by later painters. The picture was left unfinished, and was later given to Titian to complete. In his capacity as State Painter to the Republic, it was Bellini’s duty to execute the official portraits of the Doges. During his long life he saw eleven reigns, and during four he held the State appointment. Besides the official, he painted private portraits of the Doges, and that of Doge Loredano, in the National Gallery, is one of the most perfect presentments of the quattrocento. This portrait, painted by one old man of another, shows no weakening in touch or characterisation. It is as brilliant and vigorous as it is direct and simple. The face is quiet and unexaggerated; there is no unnatural fire and feeling, but an air of accustomed dignity and thought, while the technique has all the perfection of the painter’s prime.
In 1516 Giovanni was buried in the Church of SS. Giovanni and Paolo, by the side of his brother Gentile. To the last he was popular and famous, overwhelmed with attentions from the most distinguished personages of the city. Though he had begun life when art showed such a different aspect, he was by nature so imbued with that temperament, which at the time of his death was beginning to assert itself in the younger school, that he was able to assimilate a really astonishing share of the new manner. He is guided by feeling more than by intellect. All the time he is working out problems, he is dominated by the emotion of his subject, but his emotion, his pathos, are invariably tempered and restrained by the calm moderation of the quattrocento. The golden mean still has command of Bellini, and never allows his feelings, however poignant, to degenerate into sentimentality or violence.
PRINCIPAL WORKS
| Bergamo. | Lochis: Madonna (E.). |
| Morelli: Two Madonnas. | |
| Berlin. | Pietà (L.); Dead Christ. |
| Florence. | Uffizi: Allegory; The Souls in Paradise (L.). |
| London. | Portrait of Doge (L.); Madonna (L.); Agony in Garden (E.); Salvator Mundi (E.). |
| Milan. | Brera: Pietà (E.); Madonna; Madonna, 1510. |
| Mond Collection. | Dead Christ; Madonna (E.). |
| Murano. | S. Pietro: Madonna with Saints and Doge Barbarigo, 1488. |
| Naples. | Sala Grande: Transfiguration. |
| Pesaro. | S. Francesco: Altarpiece. |
| Rimini. | Dead Christ (E.). |
| Venice. | Academy: Three Madonnas; Five small allegorical paintings (L.); Madonna with SS. Catherine and Magdalene; Madonna with SS. Paul and George; Madonna with five Saints. |
| Museo Correr: Crucifixion (E.); Transfiguration (E.); Dead Christ; Dead Christ with Angels. | |
| Palazzo Ducale, Sala di Tre: Pietà (E.). | |
| Frari: Triptych; Madonna and Saints, 1488. | |
| S. Giovanni Crisostomo: S. Chrysostom with SS. Jerome and Augustine, 1513. | |
| S. Maria dell’ Orto: Madonna (E.). | |
| S. Zaccaria: Madonna and Saints, 1505. | |
| Vicenza. | S. Corona: Baptism, 1510. |