|
|
|
The present
administration buildings on the coast, of fanciful plastered fronts, superflousy
decorated walls and unpractically huge windows and size in general, were mostly
erected during the Austrian rule and appear as a foreign addition to the genuine
folk architecture. Set in rows on the coast they look like a screen to the
rural settlement in the backround. This settlement is built out of stone which
gives the impression of durability and monumentality. The roofs are covered
with heavy slabs that resist the Bura which in winter descends from Mosor
and whistles across the Channel.
“The body creeps with chill and the wind plays quivering, wavering tunes...
What says the wind? Of how the closed hearts weep, of the resignation of the
will that consents to fate, of widows that languish lonely, of lily-smiles
of babes, of how the far-away world thinks, and of the final breath of those
passed away on the high seas.
The wind is felt like a soul and it whimpers like a cello.”
(Tin Ujevic, Supetar on Brac, Jadransa posta 1929)
The old, genuine, peasant Supetar is to be found in Vrdolac Glavica and in
Varas.
There we see the houses without anything foreign or anything excessive. All
the building-material has been taken from the surroundings and so the houses
seem as if grown together with the landscape, which, in its turn, gives always
different, never repeated images. These stony forms are free from all the
foreign additions. The small cottages in Vrdolac with the adjoining kitchens,
cellars store-rooms, all set in walled yards, create much the same harmonious
arrangements as the one-storey houses on Glavica with the porches that, with
their vaults, provide shade over the cellar doors. Here we know why the fronts
are wide, the roofs painted with milk-white lime, why the windows are small
and the eaves narrow. We should especially mention here the chimneys with
very imaginative endings, not because they are over-decorated elements but
because they are here mere neccesity, they stop the wind and rain from damaging
the fire-place.
This is the first and genuine ring of old Supetar.
With the passing of time, the landed gentry increased their wealth and the
Turkish threat from across the Channel became more dangerous, it was neccessary
to raise fortified strongholds instead of luxurious houses. The Venetians
in the 16th and the 17th century do not any longer call Supetar villa (the
village) but castrum. Thus from rural settlement the Mediterranean town was
conceived.
This development was supported by the inventive setting of the baroque buildings,
from the 18th century, nearer to the landlords, which were all dominated by
the monumental church set on a gentle elevation at the foot of the bay. These
were the buildings formed out of the dressed stone in which baroque is felt
in the profiled doors, round the windows, in the small picturesque mansarde
roofs that seek for room high in the loft, Besides the porches, there are
also the balconies that rest on the decorative consoles with stone walls or
iron fences. Under the eaves are the stone nails that support the stone gutter-pipe
which frames the walls of the house like a decorative girdle. The more comfortable
mode of life slowly displaces the kitchen as the central room and creates
living-rooms with period furniture, baroque lamps and many paintings on the
walls. These are the elements of style of a particular period drawn into the
old local atmosphere with a lot of good taste. The sunny little town was growing
up, in whose tiny narrow lanes the play of light and shade was making a lating
colorful impression.
This was Supetar from the end of the 18th century, in the following years
ready to become and remain the new capital of Brac.
In the 19th century, the Austrian authority did not at all contribute to its
development by building huge, unaesthetic public buildings. This sterile atmosphere
with the petite-bourgeois spirit of the little communal places from the end
of the 19th century was obvious here in such a style of architecture. This
meant the beginning of a break with tradition and the intrusion of eclectic,
uniform models into genuine harmony, into variety and uniqueness.
The fourth Supetar, which today sees its future in its clear sandy beaches
that are framed with the cultivated pine-woods, stretch along the sea from
Babin laz on the east to Vela luka (The Big port) on the west. Stone is increasingly
giving way to concrete or is serving as a false stone facing to it, while
slabs are giving in to tiles. The vine-yards and olive-groves gradually disappear
and turn into the typified, uniform holiday villas. The cellars, lofts, fancy
chimneys and white staircases should be seen only in the old Supetar.
Perhaps such was the tribute to be paid to these times, merciless in their
urgent solutions.
Name. According to the archeological findings, Supetar was already settled
during Roman times. It is mentioned in 1423 for the first time (Supetar).
It is said that the church of St. Peter was raised only in 1604. The Early
Christian sarcophagi in the cemetery would lead us to think that the little
church was erected at approxiamately the same time as the one in Sutivan of
which the foundations from the 6th century are still preserved. It also gave,
linguistically, the same name to the settlement (Sutivan). It is hardly possible
that the sarcophagi would be erected without the adjoining shrien.
Supetar has its spring-water wells on Vrilo, in Babin laz which was the advantage
necassary to the development of the island. the pirates’ attacks and plundering
forced the people to withdraw from the coast. They started coming back there
in the 15th century, settling in the sheltered Vrdolac, on Glavica and in
Varos, which means a separate rural settlement outside the gentry’s centre
which was in Port (Lat. portus, the harbour) and get (Lat. ghetto, the separated
parts of the settlement). In these places the nobles led a life of their own,
they had their church of St. Martin and spoke very often in a strange, Venetian
language, which is still traceable in Supetar through its so-called cakacski
pronunciation.
Monuments. The new tourist
Supetaris set round the Cape of St. Nicholas to prove after many a century,
the good choice Brac’s Romans had made when they settlement here in Early
Christian times. There, near the cemetery church of St. Nicholas next to the
exterior walls of the chapel are the two most beautiful Early Christian sarcophagi
on the island decorated on the front side with relief crosses framed in rings.
On their oval covers over the whole length the long crosses are carved. Apart
from sarcophagi, it is reasonable to suppose the existence of other Early
Christian works as well but which, however, have not survived. But the cult
of the sacred, burial place has been maintained in this cemetery where these
two ancient Roman graves are again used for burial.
Much later, around the church of Saint Nicholas the traveller who saw off
Supetar’s sailing-ships when they set off to the high sea, to the Levant and
Venice, they raised a few nice tombstones which were made by Ivan Rendic (1849-1932),
the father of modern Croatian sculpture. many of his stone portraits and sculptures
bear the marks of the sculptor’s strong individuality with the emphasized
realistic features. It happened often that, because of the lack of money and
understanding from the Croatian circles in which he lived and worked he had
to look for employment outside the country, in Trieste, where he had to give
way to the bad provincial taste of his customers. this is often seen in his
tombstone monuments, which are, like some other buildings under the influence
of Secession, overloaded with symbol and decorated with too many folklore
elements.
“When I was a child, the shadows of those mountains across the sea seemed
to me like live pictures, it seemed to me that the songs of fairies were coming
from the distance, and it was only the chirping of crickets...”
(I. Rendic, an autobiographical note).
The man who so much loved his Supetar, where he wanted to educate young sculptors,
spent his last days lonely in bitter poverty up on the Glavica, among the
peasants, and was finally buried in a foreign grave in the same cemetery in
which he left a few of his monuments. These are the relief Pieta on the grave
of Franosovi, the relief of Christ’s head and a portrait of a man on the grave
of F. Pizzoli, the head of Christ on the grave of the well known opera singer
M. Vuckovic , while the tomb of the Rendic family has all the characteristic
of his style. he was looking forward with pleasure to working on the Petrinovic
family tomb for which he had already made the stone statue of Hercegovka (The
Herzegovinian woman). The order was, however cancelled and entrusted to T.
Rosandic. The big white mausoleum, sticking out like a cypress tree in this
small, harmonious Mediterranean cemetery near the sea, the pines and myrtle,
with some remote, Byzantine-Oriental features forgein to this region, seems
like a lonely and secluded monument.
Its author, T. Rosandic, in the mausoleum, however, left a few good works
like The Laying in the Grave, The Crucification, The Day of Judgement, Angels
the Singers, and the well next to the tomb which demonstartes the highest
achievement of Rosandic’s art.
“Accompanied by the breeze, filled with the scents of the island’s herbs and
shrubs, I first visited the Cemetery...Here I felt the profound melancholy
of Supetar and of the whole of this coastal district... the wind from the
pines climbed upto these cypresses... And when I suddenly heard the sounds
of a guitar, the time slipped through my fingers ike a bunch of impalpable
light-rays. I was not, to tell the truth, in the mood for crying, but I felt
that I was sentimental and that I have not been for a long, long time...”
(Tin Ujevic, Sjeta pred Supetrom (Melancholy of Supetar, Jadranska posta,
1919).
The second monumental complex is set on the site of the old chapel of St.
Peter (in portu s. Petri). This church was restored in 1604, then burnt down
in 1729, then in 1733 restored again in the baroque style when it got new
naves, the belfry etc. it was lenghtened in 1887 from the preset side door
towards the western part and on this occassion it lost a lot of its genuine
baroque style. All the three front profiled entances are preserved from that
time. Over the central one is God the Father and on the side ones, female
figures with shields. The interior of the church is attractive with it spacious
and discreet light. Striking to the eye is the big marble altar with the painting
of The Annunciation, and the side sculptures among which we recognize the
Village’s patron.
The Supetran F. Tironi left in this church the two interesting reliquaries
which hang on the side walls, with painted doors and bottom. In these paintings
we feel the skillful brush but at the same time, incomplete spirit of a gifted
amateur from the end of the 18th century.
Interesting are his altar paintings Saint Anna with Mary and ST. Thomas Aquinus
and St. Francis of Assisi, the painting with figures of the saints St. Rocchus,
St. Elmo, St. John Nepomucenes and St. John the Baptist round the figure of
Mary and the painting of The immaculate Conception, on the altar on the left
side. Over the font is the unsuccessful painting of Dunaj, the son of Ivan
Rendic. In the older part of the church are steles with Croatian inscriptions.
At the entrance we find the surprising holy water stoup composed of two large
Gothic capitals with the vaults in the corners and decorated with acanthus
leaves.
The vestibule of the church is spacious, paved and elevated, we enter it by
a stone staircase. On the church building on the left is the sun-dial, very
common in our town on the coast; under the sun-dial, is the sarcophagus with
the emblem with the inscription and the year 1744. In the interior, in the
Church assembly hall is the portrait of Supetar’s parson B. Durlindan by Tironi
and a few interesting works of art belonging to the Venetian art of painting
of the 16th and the 17th century.
We should get to know the decorative sides of the well, executed in the baroque
manner, full of religious symbols, church sings and the joys of life (the
horns of abundance).
And when we climb up the steep old way or the road, to Nerezisca, passing
through the pine wood, we reach the chapel of St. Rocchus the protector from
infectious diseases, which in the past frequently spread over the island.
It was erected in 1682 for the health of Supetar’s populace. from here beautiful
views open to the tame backround of central Brac and the Channel in front
of it.
“Sacred is this silence to me and full of its precious dearness. In the morning
the lovely sun awakes me, in front of whose face the blue coasts reveal themselves
like the harmless innocense of maidens... and in the evening, the calm is
deep, and it is a real pleasure, just before the sleep to which I am sometimes
sent by a drop of home-made wine, to see the main-land coast from Split to
Makarska, lit by the electric gleams which mark the Dugi Rat and the old pirate-nest
of Omis... I peep through the misty veil of the night towards the town of
Marulic...”
(Tin Ujevic, Supetar on Brac, Jadranska posta, 1929).
It was here that I learned why so many excellent writers kept coming to this
little town at my feet and what it meant for the painters to whom these landscapes
are their best works, like for example the pictures in the flaming colors
of our Ignjat Job.
|
|
|
|
|