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Saint Jerome In His Study Magnet

$600

Guilds played an important role in commissioning art in Renaissance Italy. Despite its religious subject, this painting was never intended to be an altarpiece. In September 1482, Siena’s Arte dei Notai, or notaries’ guild, installed this large painting in a reception room at its headquarters, and in the months that followed, payment was made to other artists for a monumental frame for the painting (no longer extant). Jerome is not shown as a penitent in the desert, as is more common, but as a humanist scholar studying at his desk, mirroring the activity and pose of the notaries at work nearby in the guild office. The saint, credited with translating the Bible into Latin, is seated at the center of his study, which is cluttered with the tools that serve him as a scholar. These same implements would also have been used by the notaries, who documented all legally binding transactions in the city.

Measures 3.5" x 2.5"
Made in the USA

Matteo di Giovanni (Borgo San Sepolcro, Italy c. 1428-1495), Saint Jerome In His Study, 1470. Tempera and oil on panel. Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Cambridge.

A loan for Beyond Words: Italian Renaissance Books, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, September 22, 2016January 16, 2017.