
David and Jonathan
Historical Context
David and Jonathan at the National Gallery depicts the deep friendship between the Old Testament warrior-king and his companion. Cima treats this subject of loyal friendship with the quiet dignity that characterizes his narrative paintings. This work falls in the decades immediately around 1500, when Renaissance ideals of harmony and classical order were being synthesised across Europe. Cima da Conegliano, active in Venice and his native Conegliano from the 1480s until around 1517, was the most accomplished Venetian follower of Giovanni Bellini in the generation before Giorgione and Titian transformed the tradition. His cool precise light, his characteristic Veneto landscape backgrounds, and his composed figure types gave his altarpieces and devotional panels a quality of contemplative clarity that served the devotional needs of the churches and private patrons throughout northeastern Italy who commissioned him. This work demonstrates the consistent quality that made him one of the most trusted religious painters in the Venetian world.
Technical Analysis
The two figures' interaction is set within a landscape rendered with Cima's characteristic luminous clarity. The warm palette and careful modeling create an intimate scene of faithful companionship.
Look Closer
- ◆David and Jonathan's embrace — or their proximity — is the compositional focus: Cima positions them so their bodies form a single unified silhouette rather than two separate figures.
- ◆Jonathan's arm around David's shoulder is the painting's central emotional gesture, and Cima renders the physical contact with the dignified restraint appropriate to his devotional register.
- ◆The Venetian landscape behind the figures — hazy, blue-green, with the characteristic stone-pine of the Veneto — places the Old Testament story in a recognizable Italian countryside.
- ◆Cima's characteristic soft lighting — diffuse, warm, without strong shadows — creates the atmosphere of quiet devotion he brings to all his sacred subjects, from Old Testament to New.






