http://utw10658.utweb.utexas.edu/items/browse?tags=587.1999&sort_field=added&sort_dir=a&output=atom <![CDATA[Blanton Museum of Art Collections]]> 2024-03-29T02:20:18-05:00 Omeka http://utw10658.utweb.utexas.edu/items/show/2824 <![CDATA[Head of Saint Michael]]> 2017-06-16T17:01:37-05:00

Dublin Core

Creator

Paolo Veronese

Title

Head of Saint Michael

Date Created

circa 1563

Spatial Coverage

41 cm x 32.1 cm (16 1/8 in. x 12 5/8 in.)

Identifier

587.1999

Medium

Oil on canvas

Description

This painting is a fragment of a fifteen-foot-tall altarpiece painted for the church of San Francesco at Lendinara, a small town near Padua, Italy. Commissioned by the cousins Antonio and Girolamo Petrobelli, the painting was one of the major projects of Paolo Veronese’s career. By 1785 the church was abandoned and demolished, and the altarpiece was cut and sold in pieces in 1788 to maximize profits. Four fragments have been identified to date. The original canvas had the body of Jesus supported by angels in the upper register and the two donors with their respective patrons—Saint Anthony Abbot and Saint Jerome—in the lower register. Saint Michael stood in the center, holding in his right hand a spear pointed at the demon and in his left scales to weigh souls on Judgment Day. The upright form of the archangel figure connects the upper and lower sections of the composition, while also reflecting the intermediary role of the much-venerated saint.

Rights Holder

The Suida-Manning Collection

Date

Verona, Italy, 1528 - 1588, Venice, Italy

Type

painting

Has Version

http://utw10658.utweb.utexas.edu/plugins/Dropbox/files/object_images/ART New/587.1999.zif

Requires

16276
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