,
Amor Vincit Omnia, c. 1602. Oil on canvas, 156.5 × 113.3 cm.
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin. Baglione's best known painting,
Sacred Love and Profane Love (or
The Divine Eros Defeats the Earthly Eros and other variants), was a direct response to
Caravaggio's
Amor Vincit Omnia (1601–02). Baglione's painting exists in two versions, the earlier in the
Gemäldegalerie, Berlin (c. 1602–03) and the later in the
Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica at
Palazzo Barberini in Rome. Both show Sacred Love as an angelic winged figure interrupting a 'meeting' between Cupid (Profane Love), shown as in the Caravaggio as a smaller and naked winged figure, and the Devil. In the later Rome version the devil is portrayed with the caricatured features of Caravaggio, while in Berlin his face is turned away. Both paintings were commissioned by members of the
Giustiniani family in Rome: the Caravaggio by the banker and collector Marchese
Vincenzo Giustiniani, and Baglione's riposte by his brother Cardinal
Benedetto Giustiniani. What in the two brothers was probably a good-natured family joke reflected serious rivalry between the artists concerned. Baglione was greatly influenced by the style of Caravaggio during this period of his career, and the younger artist and his circle had claimed, with some justification, that Baglione had plagiarized his style. In late August 1603 Baglione filed a suit for
libel against Caravaggio,
Orazio Gentileschi,
Ottavio Leoni, and Filipo Trisegni in connection with some unflattering poems circulated around Rome over the preceding summer, which he appears to have been correct in attributing to Caravaggio's circle. Baglione had recently completed his large
altarpiece of the
Resurrection of Jesus for
Il Gesu, the main church of the
Jesuit Order (it was much later replaced), and claimed that Caravaggio was jealous of this important commission. Caravaggio's testimony during the trial as recorded in court documents is one of the few documented records of his thoughts about art and his contemporaries. It included statements that: "I don't know any painter who thinks Giovanni Baglione is a good painter", the Resurrection altarpiece was "clumsy [goffa]" and "it's the worst he's done, and I haven't heard a single painter praise the said painting." Caravaggio was found guilty and held in the
Tor di Nona prison for two weeks after the trial, but far from clearing his reputation, Caravaggio's damaging remarks have dominated the critical assessment of Baglione ever since, although Gentileschi's evidence conceded that he was a "first-class painter". Years after Caravaggio's early death in 1610, Baglione was his first biographer, and though he gave him much praise for his early works, his dislike is evident, concentrated on the younger artist's life and character and his later paintings; this verdict, especially as regards the man, has also remained highly influential. ==Paintings==