According
to Wikipedia, the Bellini was
invented sometime between 1934 and 1948 by Giuseppe Cipriani, the founder of
Harry’s Bar in Venice. The Bellini is
an official IBA (International Bartenders Association) cocktail that consists
of puréed white summer peaches and ice cold Prosecco. Cipriani’s original recipe called for a dash
of raspberry or cherry juice to give the drink a pink glow. He named the cocktail the Bellini
because its unique pink color reminded him of the toga of a saint in a painting
by 15th-century Venetian artist, Giovanni Bellini.
Or perhaps
this one…
Success on
the cocktail circuit, sadly, has continued to elude Mantegna. Unlike his contemporary, Bellini, there is no
IBA cocktail named after him. Considering
Mantegna's love of forced perspective, flinty landscapes, and classical antiquity, how
about this for the Paduan?
Giovanni Bellini
(1430 – 1516) was an Italian Renaissance painter born in Venice into a family
of artists. His use of clear,
slow-drying oil paints, introduced to Venice by the Sicilian painter, Antonello
da Messina, revolutionized Venetian painting.
Bellini’s altar pieces and Madonnas, in particular, show his mastery of this
new material, with which he was able to create deep, rich tints of sumptuous
colors and detailed atmospheric gradations of tones. His sensuous, coloristic style greatly
affected the Venetian School, especially his pupil, Titian---and his
brother-in-law, Andrea Mantegna.
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St. Sebastian (1480), Mantegna
|
Andrea Mantegna
(1431 – 1506) was born near Padua and was an avid student of Greek and Roman archaeology. His hard landscapes and somewhat rigid figures
are evidence of his intense love of antiquities and his sculptural approach to
painting. Mantegna also experimented
with perspective, a painting technique invented by Giotto. Mantegna’s contribution to the invention was
to lower the horizon line to create a greater sense of monumentality. Although not always mathematically correct,
his manipulation of space within the picture plane created astonishing optical
illusions.
Being
related by marriage and living in close proximity, Bellini and Mantegna intensively
influenced each other’s art during their lives.
Mantegna’s spectacular visual inventions and his interest in classical
sculpture made a profound impression on Bellini. Reciprocally, Bellini’s mastery of color had a
profound effect on Mantegna, whose use of color in his early works is hesitant
and neutral. By contrast, Mantegna’s mature
works attest to his intimate familiarity with Bellini’s and show a more balanced
use of color and a nuanced tonality. Here's a shade of Bellini pink.
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| Judith and Holofernes, 1495, Mantegna |
An exhibition
at Berlin’s painting gallery offers a unique opportunity to explore and compare
these two Renaissance masters. Mantegna + Bellini, Masters of the Renaissance
opened at the Gemäldegalerie on March
1st and runs through June 30, 2019.
The exhibition presents over 100 paintings and drawings by the two
artists, hanging them side by side in conversation with one another. Here is a link to the Gemäldegalerie’s
interactive website for the exhibition. https://www.mantegnabellini.de/en/. In addition to an informative text that assiduously
avoids art-speak, there are lots of creative features and educational games to enjoy. If the exhibition is half as much fun as the
website, it should be a spectacular success.
![]() |
Dead Christ Supported by Angels (ca. 1475), Bellini
|

The
Mantegna: 2 ounces Poli’s Marconi 46 Gin, poured straight on the
rocks, with a sprig of rosemary and a Kalamata olive. That'll give you a whole new perspective!
Keep it
real!
Marilyn








The title of this column is brilliant. You should either be in the advertising business or writing headlines for great magazine stories.
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