Curators’ Introduction to Parmigianino: The Vision of Saint Jerome

Useful online lecture from the National Gallery introducing their exhibition on a painting from 1526 by Parmigianino.

Maria Alambritis, the project curator and Mattias Wivel, a former curator at the gallery, told us the history of the work including telling us how Parmigianino was working on it during the Sack of Rome but the German soldiers were so impressed by the work that they let him finish it.

The show also includes a number of the drawings for the project and they outlined what each had been used for and how we can see him working out problems in the composition. They also looked at possible influences for the work.

They spent some time discussing some of the theological ideas behind the work in particular “The Immaculate Conception” and the “Woman of the Apocalypse”.

I went to the exhibition the following day so look out for the next blog post describing it!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Renaissance Nude

Thomas Becket: Murder and Making of a Saint

Sky Arts Portrait Artist of the Year Exhibition 2019