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Saint Simon

Simone Martinic. 1315/1320

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

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

Simon “the Zealot” is one of Jesus’s apostles in the first three Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke), but otherwise Simon is an elusive figure. Legend says that he was martyred by being sawn apart, but there is no saw to indicate his martyrdom in this half-length portrait. This panel once decorated the predella of an altarpiece along with nine other small portraits of apostles, three of which are in the collection of the National Gallery of Art: Saint Matthew, Saint James Major, and Saint Judas Thaddeus.


The array of 10 apostle portraits was already a bit old-fashioned when Simone painted the altarpiece and helps to determine the painting’s date, around 1320. After that time, such predellas were more typically decorated with a series of narrative scenes from the life of Jesus, the Virgin Mary, or a saint. In addition, it is believed that this is the last time Simone employed rounded arches, choosing the more “modern” pointed Gothic arch for his later altarpieces.


Simone Martini (Sienese, active from 1315; died 1344) was probably a student of the great Sienese master Duccio di Buoninsegna (Sienese, c. 1250/1255 - 1318/1319). While retaining the older artist’s delight in pattern and decorative effect, the younger painter adopted a softer, more lyrical style. Its elegance and refinement drew praise from Petrarch, whom Simone met while working for the pope in Avignon (seat of the papacy 1309–1378), and for whom he painted a portrait of the poet’s beloved Laura.

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  • Title: Saint Simon
  • Creator: Simone Martini
  • Date Created: c. 1315/1320
  • Physical Dimensions: painted surface: 26.2 x 19.7 cm (10 5/16 x 7 3/4 in.) overall: 30.7 x 23.5 cm (12 1/16 x 9 1/4 in.) framed: 44.4 x 60 cm (17 1/2 x 23 5/8 in.)
  • Provenance: Acquired between 1832 and 1842 by Johann Anton Ramboux [1790-1866], Cologne, together with six other components of the same series, presumably in Siena;[1] (his estate sale, J.M. Heberle, Cologne, 23 May 1867, no. 75 [all ten panels], as by Lippo Memmi);[2] the whole series purchased by the Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, Cologne, which deaccessioned it in 1922-1923;[3] the four NGA panels, 1952.5.23-.26, purchased together with a fifth panel of the same series, by Philip Lehman [1861-1947], New York, by 1928;[4] the four NGA panels sold June 1943 to the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, New York;[5] gift 1952 to the NGA. [1] Ramboux built up his huge collection of early Italian pictures essentially in the above-mentioned years of his second period of residence in Italy; see Christoph Merzenich,"_Di dilettanza per un artista_ - Der Sammler Antonio Giovanni Ramboux in der Toskana," in _Lust und Verlust_, edited by Hiltrud Kier and Frank Günter Zehnder, 2 vols., Cologne, 1995-1998: 1(1995): 303-314. [2] Without quoting their provenance, the sale catalogue entry states only that the ten busts “ . . . stimmen im Ausdruck wie in der übrigen Technik mit den Wandmalereien im Stadthause zu Sangeminiano überein.” [3] See Kier and Zehnder 1995-1998, 2(1998): 550-552. [4] The four panels in Washington and a fifth, representing _Saint Philip_, are included in the catalogue of the Lehman collection (Robert Lehman, _The Philip Lehman Collection, New York_, Paris, 1928: nos. xix-xxiii). Possibly, Philip Lehman acquired them through Edward Hutton in London, who also handled the panels of the series now in The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. [5] The bill of sale for the Kress Foundation’s purchase of fifteen paintings from the Lehman collection, including NGA 1952.5.23-.26, 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/1905.
  • Rights: CC0
  • Medium: tempera on panel
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

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