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Death of St. Peter Martyr

Jacobello del Fiore (ca. 1380–1439)

Italian, Renaissance Period, ca. 1400-1600 CE, Early Renaissance
ca. 1428
56.8 x 46.8 x 0.9 cm (22 3/8 x 18 7/16 x 3/8 in.)
tempera on panel
HC.P.1922.01.(T)

On view


Permalink: http://museum.doaks.org/objects-1/info/807

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Description
The subject of this painting is the death of Saint Peter Martyr, who was murdered near Milan in 1252. Because of his zeal in defending the faith against heresy, Peter was appointed Inquisitor for Lombardy and as such made many enemies. According to the Golden Legend, a hired assassin attacked him on his way from Como to Milan and bludgeoned him on the head, stabbed him, and left him for dead. On returning, the assassin saw that he was still alive and pierced his heart with a knife. Another legend relates that Saint Peter struggled to his knees and wrote with his blood the first words of the Creed: Credo in unum deum (I believe in one God). The three crowns of martyrdom that emanate from the glory or aureola at the upper left are red (for virginity), black (for doctoral preaching), and gold (for martyrdom).

The art connoisseur Bernard Berenson first attributed this painting to Jacobello del Fiore in 1946 on the basis of a photograph, although the painting was at that time attributed to Gentile da Fabriano. Jacobello had early come under the influence of the Byzantine-inspired fourteenth-century Venetian style. He later became acquainted with Gentile, who had come to Venice in 1414–1415, and Jacobello adopted his more courtly International Gothic style. The jewel-like colors, gilding, and tapestrylike landscape details are typical of this style.

When Berenson first saw the painting about 1893 in the Sterbini Collection in Rome, he wrote that it then had above it a lunette painting, a Madonna of Humility. Later, he saw the Dumbarton Oaks painting at a dealer’s, but without the Madonna. The Madonna of Humility later was at Wildenstein & Co., New York, N.Y., ca. 1966–70, and is now at the Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart (Inv. L1232) where it has been on loan from a private collection since 1982. The Staatsgalerie no longer considers the work that of Jacobello del Fiore, but attributes the painting to Giovanni da Bologna. For more information see: https://www.staatsgalerie.de/en/g/collection/digital-collection/einzelansicht/sgs/werk/einzelansicht/98D08703467F39BB42B83FBAE2193F9C.html

-J. Carder



Bibliography
Suida, Wilhelm. "Two Unpublished Paintings by Gentile da Fabriano." Art Quarterly 3, no. 4 (Autumn 1940), 349, fig. 2.

Berenson, Bernard. Italian Pictures of the Renaissance, Venetian School I. London: Phaidon Publishers Inc., 1957, 93f, pl. 37.

Grassi, Luigi. Tutta la Pittura di Gentile da Fabriano. Milan: 1953, pl. 101.

Fredericksen, Burton B., and Frederico Zeri. Census of Pre-Nineteenth-Century Italian Paintings in North American Public Collections. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1972, 100, 644.

Christiansen, Keith. Gentile da Fabriano. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1982, 70 (note 15), 132 cat. XLV, pl. 104.

Hall, Edwin, and Horst Uhr. "Aureola super Auream: Crowns and Related Symbols of Special Distinction for Saints in Late Gothic and Renaissance Iconography." The Art Bulletin 67, no. 4 (December 1985), 586-587, fig. 17.

Meilman, Patricia. Titian and the Altarpiece in Renaissance Venice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000, 41, 43, 80, fig. 18.

Bühl, Gudrun, editor. Dumbarton Oaks, The Collections. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection (distributed by Harvard University Press), 2008, 304f, ill.

Zaru, Denise. Art and Observance in Renaissance Venice: The Dominicans and their Artists (1391 - ca. 1545). Rome: Viella, 2014, 32, 253, 276, fig. 14.


Exhibition History
"A Century of Progress, Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture, 1934," Art Institute of Chicago, 6/1-11/1/1934, cat. no. 8 as Burgundian, 15th century.

"Konstens Venedig," Nationalmuseum, Stockholm, 10/20/1962-2/10/1963, cat. no. 43.

Washington, DC. Dumbarton Oaks, "75 Years/75 Objects: Celebrating 75 Years of the Dumbarton Oaks Museum," September 8, 2015 - May 22, 2016.


Acquisition History
Collection of Guilio Sterbini (d. 1911), Rome by 1893;[1]

Collection of the dealer Georges B. Brauer (d. 1935), Florence;

With the dealer Fritz Steinmeyer, Lucerne;

Purchased from the dealer Dikran G. Kelekian, New York, NY, by Mildred Barnes and Robert Woods Bliss, September 15, 1922;[2]

Collection of Mildred Barnes and Robert Woods Bliss, Washington, DC, September 15, 1922 to November 29, 1940;

Gifted to Harvard University, November 29, 1940;

Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, House Collection, Washington, DC.


Notes:
[1] Correspondence with Bernard Berenson in which he says that he saw the picture in the Sterbini collection about 1893
[2] Painting was attributed to Gentile da Fabriano


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Object Last Modified: 9/24/2024