Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Saint Jerome in Meditation (Caravaggio)

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Year
  
c. 1605

Artist
  
Caravaggio

Period
  
Baroque

Medium
  
Oil on canvas

Created
  
1605

Genre
  
Christian art

Saint Jerome in Meditation (Caravaggio) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Dimensions
  
140.5 cm × 101.5 cm (55.3 in × 40.0 in)

Location
  
Museum of Montserrat, Montserrat

Similar
  
Caravaggio artwork, Baroque artwork, Christian art

Saint Jerome in Meditation (c. 1605) is a painting by the Italian Baroque master Caravaggio, now in the Museum of Montserrat, next to the Monastery of Santa Maria, Montserrat (Museu del Monestir de Santa Maria).

Saint Jerome, hermit, Father of the Church, and responsible for the translation of the Bible into Latin, (the Vulgate Bible) was a popular figure in Caravaggio's time, and the artist painted him at least eight times (only three survive). Whether this was from personal choice or at the request of patrons is unknown, but it gave Caravaggio the opportunity to explore the potential - from an artist's perspective - of aged and wrinkled flesh. Jerome is shown here contemplating one of his symbols, the skull, a reminder of the inevitability of death and the vanity of worldly things.

The painting is probably from the Giustiniani collection (the collection of Caravaggio's patron the banker Vincenzo Giustiniani and his brother the cardinal Benedetto). Benedetto built up a large collection of religious works by the artist, and a St Jerome of the same dimensions as this one is in the Giustiniani inventory of 1638.

Caravaggio biographer Peter Robb points out that the brooding, introverted mood of this painting is strikingly similar to that of a John the Baptist, now in Kansas City, painted at about the same time.

References

Saint Jerome in Meditation (Caravaggio) Wikipedia