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Spanish school of the 18th century

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Spanish school of the 18th century.
"Saint Paul".
Oil on copper.
With frame in oak wood.
Measurements: 12,5 x 11 cm; 37 x 34,5 cm (frame)
Devotional painting of Saint Paul, destined to a private altar or chapel, made on copper and in small format, something usual in this kind of religious works.
Saint Paul was a Hellenised Jew from the Diaspora, born in Tarsus. He was therefore Jewish by ethnicity, Greek by culture and Roman by nationality. He received the name Saul, which he changed to Paul after his conversion. Born at the beginning of the first century, he studied in Jerusalem under the rabbi Gamaliel, who would have been noted for his hatred of Christians. One day, when he was on his way from Jerusalem to Damascus around the year 35, he was dazzled by lightning and fell from his horse. Then he heard the voice of Jesus saying to him: "Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me? As a result of this experience, the saint went abruptly from persecutor to zealot of Christianity. After curing the blindness of a Christian from Damascus, he began his life as a missionary until he reached Jerusalem, where he came into contact with Peter and the other apostles. In the Middle Ages numerous corporations were placed under his patronage, due to various aspects of his iconography, life and miracles. However, St Paul was never a popular saint, which is proof of the relative poverty of his iconography. In fact, his role in art is not commensurate with his importance in the spread of Christianity. In early Christian art, his only attributes are a book or a scroll, and in the 13th century his emblem appears, the sword which was the instrument of his martyrdom.

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Con marco en madera de roble.

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Time, Location
24 Jan 2024
Spain, Barcelona
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[ translate ]

Spanish school of the 18th century.
"Saint Paul".
Oil on copper.
With frame in oak wood.
Measurements: 12,5 x 11 cm; 37 x 34,5 cm (frame)
Devotional painting of Saint Paul, destined to a private altar or chapel, made on copper and in small format, something usual in this kind of religious works.
Saint Paul was a Hellenised Jew from the Diaspora, born in Tarsus. He was therefore Jewish by ethnicity, Greek by culture and Roman by nationality. He received the name Saul, which he changed to Paul after his conversion. Born at the beginning of the first century, he studied in Jerusalem under the rabbi Gamaliel, who would have been noted for his hatred of Christians. One day, when he was on his way from Jerusalem to Damascus around the year 35, he was dazzled by lightning and fell from his horse. Then he heard the voice of Jesus saying to him: "Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me? As a result of this experience, the saint went abruptly from persecutor to zealot of Christianity. After curing the blindness of a Christian from Damascus, he began his life as a missionary until he reached Jerusalem, where he came into contact with Peter and the other apostles. In the Middle Ages numerous corporations were placed under his patronage, due to various aspects of his iconography, life and miracles. However, St Paul was never a popular saint, which is proof of the relative poverty of his iconography. In fact, his role in art is not commensurate with his importance in the spread of Christianity. In early Christian art, his only attributes are a book or a scroll, and in the 13th century his emblem appears, the sword which was the instrument of his martyrdom.

COMMENTS

Con marco en madera de roble.

[ translate ]
Sale price
Unlock
Estimate
Unlock
Time, Location
24 Jan 2024
Spain, Barcelona
Auction House
Unlock
View it on