Puneet Varma (Editor)

St. Quentin (Pontormo)

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Year
  
1517

Artist
  
Pontormo

Medium
  
oil on canvas

Created
  
1517

St. Quentin (Pontormo)

Dimensions
  
150 cm × 100 cm (59 in × 39 in)

Location
  
Pinacoteca Comunale, Sansepolcro

Similar
  
Portrait of Maria Salviati, Madonna with Child and Saints, Annunciation, Portrait of a Halberdier, Visitation

St. Quentin is a painting attributed to the Italian Renaissance master Jacopo Pontormo. According to Giorgio Vasari's Vite, one of Pontormo's pupils, Gianmaria Pichi, was commissioned by his hometown of Sansepolcro a processional standard with the figure of St. Quentin; Pontormo decided to collaborate on the work, at the extent that he finished to complete most of it. The saint's posture resembles that of the "Dying Slave" by Michelangelo: the fact that Pontormo was friend of the latter, confirms the attribution.

The position of the nails in St. Quentin's body is directly inspired to Jacopo da Varagine's Legenda Aurea.

References

St. Quentin (Pontormo) Wikipedia