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Christ in the Wilderness by Moretto da Brescia

Christ in the Wilderness

Moretto da Brescia·1515

Historical Context

Christ in the Wilderness from around 1515 at the Metropolitan Museum shows the young Moretto treating the subject of Christ's temptation in the desert. This early work demonstrates his developing style before the full maturation of his distinctive silvery manner. His religious works possess a grave, introspective dignity that set them apart from the more theatrical tendencies of contemporary Venetian painting. Moretto da Brescia, the leading painter in Brescia in the first half of the sixteenth century, developed an independent artistic identity that drew on the Venetian tradition (Titian, Savoldo, Lotto), the Lombard tradition of surface precision, and his own observation of the religious life of the Brescian churches and confraternities that were his primary patrons. His altarpieces and devotional panels combine the warm Venetian colorism he absorbed from Venice with a specifically Brescian quality of religious seriousness — the Counter-Reformation devotional culture of a city that took its Catholicism with unusual intensity. His influence on the subsequent generation of Brescian painters, particularly Moroni, was foundational.

Technical Analysis

The solitary figure is set against a landscape with early atmospheric handling. Moretto's developing palette and figure treatment show the foundations of his mature contemplative style.

Look Closer

  • ◆The wilderness setting — rocky, spare, without vegetation or water — suits the Synoptic narrative of forty days of fasting in the desert.
  • ◆Christ's face carries the specific exhaustion of a prolonged fast rather than theatrical suffering — a quiet, interior strain rather than dramatic anguish.
  • ◆An angel attends Christ bearing bread or flowers, marking the end of the temptation rather than its height.
  • ◆The cool silver-blue tone that became Moretto's signature is already present in the sky and atmospheric distance of this early work.

See It In Person

Metropolitan Museum of Art

New York, United States

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil paint
Dimensions
45.7 × 55.2 cm
Era
High Renaissance
Style
High Renaissance
Genre
Religious
Location
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
View on museum website →

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Portrait of a Gentleman with a Letter by Moretto da Brescia

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Portrait of a Young Man (Fortunato Martinengo Cesaresco?) by Moretto da Brescia

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