

The Chiesa di San Rocco in Barga was built in 1380 as a votive offering at the end of a plague outbreak — a community's surviving gratitude expressed in coral stone and fresco, the bargain between the living and the protective saint rendered in architecture. The interior has not been restored in the modern sense: the frescoes survive as time left them, the pigments faded and darkened in the way that 14th-century pigments fade, the saints on the walls as they have been for 600 years. This panorama captures the interior's full extent — nave and apse, fresco fragments and plain stone — in the light that enters through small windows designed for a pre-electric world. Barga is in the Lunigiana, the mountain territory between Tuscany and Liguria; San Rocco is a neighborhood church that happens to be 646 years old.
