José de Ribera and workshop.
"St. Paul", c. 1640 -1650.
Oil on canvas. Relined.
Attached report issued by Mrs. Vivina Farina, Professor of Art History at the Academy of Fine Arts in Naples.
Signed.
Measurements: 122 x 97 cm.
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DESCRIPTION
JOSÉ DE RIBERA (Xátiva, Valencia, 1591 - Naples, 1652) AND WORKSHOP
"St. Paul", c. 1640 -1650.
Oil on canvas. Relined.
Attached report issued by Mrs. Vivina Farina, Professor of Art History at the Academy of Fine Arts in Naples.
Signed.
Measurements: 122 x 97 cm.
The figure represented, identifiable as St. Paul by the presence of the sword, his most characteristic attribute, is part of one of the most recognizable typologies of the production of José de Ribera. The composition is closely related to models used by the artist himself in his famous series of philosophers and apostles made in Naples around 1630-1632. In particular, it is almost identical to his representation of Pythagoras preserved in the Museo de Bellas Artes de Valencia, which shows Ribera's usual practice of reusing compositional schemes, adapting them by means of attributes to transform philosophers into apostles or vice versa. This visual ambiguity is not accidental: it responds to a humanist conception in which classical wisdom and Christian truth converge in the same image.
These figures, probably conceived for important collectors such as Fernando Afán de Ribera y Enríquez or Prince Charles Eusebius of Liechtenstein, are characterized by their uniform format and individualized approach. The characters appear isolated, concentrated in their inner world, with few narrative elements. In the case of St. Paul, the sword is enough to define his identity, while his reflective attitude brings him closer to the universe of the philosophers.
From the stylistic point of view, the work fully displays the distinctive qualities of Ribera in his maturity: a dramatic illumination that emerges from a dark background, modeling the volume with strong hallmarks; a dense brushstroke that gives corporeity to the forms; and a sober palette that emphasizes the materiality of the figure. All this contributes to create an image of great psychological intensity, in which the viewer is confronted not only with a saint, but with a deeply human presence.
José de Ribera, known as the Españoleto, was a key master of the Spanish Baroque, and in general of European art history. Although no documentary sources or evidence of his youth are preserved, it is believed that he trained with Francisco Ribalta in Valencia, after which he went to Italy, first to the north and later to Rome, where he learned first-hand about the classicists and the tenebrism of the Dutch who settled there. Finally he settled in Naples, where he arrived in 1616. Then began his period of maturity and splendor; Ribera enjoyed fame and a large workshop, and his works spread throughout Europe through engravings. He worked for viceroys and high officials of Spanish origin settled in Naples, so many of his works soon reached Spain. He was in fact famous in his native country, and in fact Velázquez himself visited him in 1630. Today works by Ribera are kept in the Prado Museum, the Louvre, the Capodimonte Museum, the Fine Arts Museum in Budapest, the Hermitage in St. Petersburg, the Kunsthistorisches and Liechtenstein Museums in Vienna, the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, the Art Institute in Chicago, the Metropolitan Museum in New York, the National Gallery and the Royal Collection in London, the Borghese Gallery in Rome and other important art galleries in Europe, America and Asia.
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