An unusually constructed, polished novel by Bernardi (the forthcoming In the Gathering Woods) offers the stories of three separate Italian Renaissance artists, providing a meditative study on art and life of the time.
Beginning with the humble Bartolomeo de Bartolai, Bernardi traces his simple life in a mountain village where he herds sheep and dreams of art. Bartolomeo collects small pieces of broken ceramics and secrets them away for his biblically themed mosaics, on which he works on in an abandoned while caring for his aging family. Martin de Martinelli takes the chance his childhood friend Bartolomeo won’t and travels to the great cities to seek his fortune as an artisan, hoping to use his confidence and gregarious personality to become a success, perhaps one day an artist. Next, the action moves to the grand Venetian home and workshop of master painter Titian in his later years, when wealth and fame have become an old habit. The author considers small and large details of the artist’s life through a series of perspectives: Titian’s, his dutiful daughter's, his methodical middle son's, their maid’s. Finally, after the painter and most of his family have died (plague being ever-present and ubiquitous), Titian's eldest son, miserable and in rags, unrepentantly looks back on the wastefulness of his life. Having treated her novel like a trio of nesting boxes, opened to reveal the stories inside, Bernardi now replaces the narrative covers one by one. Martin recalls his life of steady work, steady drinking, and narrow escape during a period of religious persecutions as he journeys to Geneva, still looking for grand success. The book closes with Bartolomeo, now an old man, retreating to a cave to work on a monumental mural. He is the true artist of the trio, Bernardi suggests, virtuously laboring simply for the love of beauty.
A fine, contemplative work, languorously exploring the passionate impetus to create.