Currently not on view

The Pestilence of 1656

Carlo Coppola, Italian, active ca. 1635–1672
y1963-36
Coppola’s The Pestilence of 1656 is an exceptionally grim portrayal of Naples’s most devastating bout with the black death. The narrative unfolds in a metaphorical battlefield covered with bodies and devoid of any suggestion of divine intercession in aid of the sick. Poignant details include an infant nursing from his dead mother’s breast and a figure whose face is covered with a cloth—speaking to the odor of the decaying bodies as well as the fear of contracting the plague through putrid air, a false but widespread contemporary belief.

More Context

Special Exhibition

This exceptionally grim portrayal of Naples’s devastating bout with the bubonic plague in 1656 is set outside the city walls in a metaphorical battlefield covered with bodies and devoid of any suggestion of divine intercession. The grotesque blisters and blackened limbs that were often manifestations of the plague presented challenges for contemporary artists, who were expected to show restraint and decorum in their works. Instead, Coppola depicted bloated bodies with varying colors to suggest different states of decomposition. In the foreground, an infant tries to nurse from his dead mother’s breast; nearby, a figure tending to the dead covers his face with a cloth, alluding both to the odor of the decaying bodies as well as to the fear of contracting the plague through putrid air, a false but widespread belief at the time.

More About This Object

Information

Title
The Pestilence of 1656
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
76 × 99 cm (29 15/16 × 39 in.) frame: 96.8 × 119.7 × 5.4 cm (38 1/8 × 47 1/8 × 2 1/8 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Caroline G. Mather Fund
Object Number
y1963-36
Place Made

Europe, Naples

Signatures
Interlocking Cs-representing the artist's initials on right rear haunch of bullock.
Culture
Period
Materials

Mirell Gallery, Miami (in 1963; sold to Princeton University Art Museum).