
Three Saints: Roch, Anthony Abbot, and Lucy
Historical Context
Cima da Conegliano painted these three saints — Roch, Anthony Abbot, and Lucy — around 1513, near the end of his career. Cima was a leading painter of the Venetian mainland, based in Conegliano in the foothills of the Dolomites. Saint Roch, invoked against plague, and Saint Anthony Abbot, patron of animals and those suffering from ergotism, were among the most widely venerated saints in northern Italy. This panel likely formed part of a larger polyptych.
Technical Analysis
Cima's oil technique, originally on wood and later transferred to canvas, demonstrates his limpid, luminous color and serene figural style. The saints are modeled with the soft, warm light characteristic of Venetian painting, with careful attention to drapery textures and landscape background.



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