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Saint John the Evangelist

Master of Saint Francisc. 1272

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
Washington, DC, United States

This and another panel in the National Gallery of Art depicting Saint James Minor were part of a large—11 feet long—and impressive altarpiece made for the church of San Francesco al Prato in Perugia (see Saint John the Evangelist). Only the monks and other clergy would have seen these paintings because they decorated the back of the altarpiece. The front, the only side normally visible to the congregation, likely illustrated episodes from the life of Christ, with saints and prophets interspersed.


Saint John and his companions on the back of the altarpiece stand under arches that, when all the panels were joined, would have placed them in a continuous arcade. Circular cuttings in the spandrels between the arches probably held glass ornaments. The round form of the arches, the acanthus capitals of the columns, and the Roman style dress of the figures were modeled after an early Christian sarcophagus that had been unearthed in Perugia in 1262, perhaps ten years or so before the altarpiece was painted. This marble coffin was reused for the burial of the Blessed Egido (known in English as Blessed Giles) in the crypt of San Francesco. In all likelihood, the altarpiece stood directly above the spot where Egido, one of Francis’s first followers, was entombed.


Additional surviving panels (now in other museums) include four other apostles and Saint Francis. Inclusion of the saint, canonized some 50 years earlier, would have had particular significance in this Franciscan church. Many members of the order regarded their founder, Saint Francis, as the 13th apostle.

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  • Title: Saint John the Evangelist
  • Creator: Master of Saint Francis
  • Date Created: c. 1272
  • Physical Dimensions: painted surface: 48.3 × 22.5 cm (19 × 8 7/8 in.) overall: 49.8 x 24.2 cm (19 5/8 x 9 1/2 in.) framed: 58.4 x 32.7 x 6 cm (23 x 12 7/8 x 2 3/8 in.)
  • Provenance: Executed in all probability for the church of San Francesco al Prato in Perugia, where at least part of the fragments belonging to the same altarpiece were still preserved in 1793;[1] probably privately owned in Perugia;[2] Anton de Waal [1837–1917], Rome;[3] probably (Paolo Paolini, Rome), by 1921;[4] Philip Lehman [1861–1947], New York, by 1928; sold June 1943 to the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, New York;[5] gift 1952 to NGA. [1] William Young Ottley (_A Series of Plates Engraved after the Paintings and Sculptures of the Most Eminent masters of the Early Florentine School_, London, 1826: pl. 1) describes having seen the _Deposition_ and _Lamentation_, from the same altarpiece and now in the Galleria Nazionale in Perugia, in the convent of San Francesco in Perugia in 1793. Evidently, as Dillan Gordon (“A Perugian provenience for the Franciscan double - sided altar - piece by the Maestro di S. Francesco,” _The Burlington Magazine_ 124 [1982]: 72 n. 41) observes, the altarpiece had already been sawn apart at that time; see the following note. Previously, Robert Lehman (_The Philip Lehman Collection, New York_, Paris, 1928: nos. CXII–CXIII), Edward B. Garrison (_Italian Romanesque Panel Painting. An Illustrated Index_, Florence, 1949: 171), and others proposed a provenance from Assisi for both NGA 1952.5.15 and .16. Jurgen Schultze (“Ein Dugento - altar aus Assisi? Versuch einer Rekonstruktion,” _Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Istituts Florenz_ 10 [1961]: 59-66; “Zur Kunst des Franziskusmeister,” _Wallraf-Richartz-Jahrbuch_ 25 [1963]: 109-150; “Die Fresken in der Unterkirche von San Francesco zu Assisi und andere Werke des Franziskusmeister,” _Raggi_ 7, no. 2 [1967]: 44-58) and Luiz C. Marques (_La peinture du Duecento en Italie Centrale_, Paris, 1987: 61-64) maintain that the painting to which the NGA panels originally belonged was executed for the high altar of the lower church of San Francesco in Assisi, but most others have abandoned that theory. [2] The two panels with _Stories of Christ_ entered the Accademia di Belle Arti in Perugia in 1810 (and thence into the Galleria Nazionale, as no. 22) following the suppression of the religious orders. The panel of _Saint Anthony_ (no. 21) that originally flanked the scene of _Lamentation_ was acquired some time later by the Municipio of Perugia for the then Pinacoteca Civica (see Francesco Santi, _Galleria Nazionale dell’Umbria. Dipinti, sculture e oggetti d’arte di età romanica e gotica_, Rome, 1969: 28). Probably, as in various other cases (see for example Miklós Boskovits and David Alan Brown, _Italian Paintings of the Fifteenth Century_, The Systematic Catalogue of the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 2003: 120), the components of the dossal remained in the convent even after its dispersal, perhaps distributed for devotional reasons in the cells and then removed by individual friars after its suppression. Whatever the case, the panels that did not enter the Galleria Nazionale in Perugia apparently surfaced together on the art market in the last decades of the nineteenth century. It was probably in the same period that the figure of the Prophet Isaiah entered the treasury of the basilica in Assisi. [3] Anton de Waal arrived in Rome from his native Germany in 1868 and in 1873 became rector of the Collegio Teutonico of Santa Maria in Campo Santo in the same city, where he formed a small museum (Erwin Gatz, _Anton de Waal (1837-1917) un der Campo Santo Teutonico_, Freiburg/Breisgau, 1980). According to Schultze (1961, 64), the four panels formerly forming part of the altarpiece in San Francesco al Prato were sold by the arch-confraternity of Santa Maria della Pietà in Campo Santo Teutonico in 1921. [4] According to John Pope-Hennessy and Laurence B. Kanter (_The Robert Lehman Collection, I, Italian Paintings_, New York and Princeton, 1987: 80), the panel with _Saints Bartholomew and Simon_ now in The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (Robert Lehman Collection, no. 1975.1.104), was with the dealer Paolo Paolini in Rome before Philip Lehman purchased it together with NGA 1952.5.15 and .16. [5] Robert Lehman, _The Philip Lehman Collection, New York_, Paris, 1928: nos. 61, 62. The bill of sale for the Kress Foundation’s purchase of fifteen paintings from the Lehman collection, including NGA 1952.5.15 and .16, is dated 11 June 1943; payment was made four days later (copy in NGA curatorial files). The documents concerning the 1943 sale all indicate that Philip Lehman’s son Robert Lehman (1892–1963) was owner of the paintings, but it is not clear in the Lehman Collection archives at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, whether Robert made the sale for his father or on his own behalf. See Laurence Kanter’s e-mail of 6 May 2011, about ownership of the Lehman collection, in NGA curatorial files. See also The Kress Collection Digital Archive, https://kress.nga.gov/Detail/objects/1865.
  • Rights: CC0
  • Medium: tempera on panel
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

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