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Polyptych of the Apocalypse by Jacobello Alberegno

Polyptych of the Apocalypse

Jacobello Alberegno·1360

Historical Context

Jacobello Alberegno's Polyptych of the Apocalypse, now in the Gallerie dell'Accademia in Venice, is a remarkable and rare visual interpretation of the Book of Revelation in fourteenth-century Italian panel painting. The Apocalypse was seldom depicted in Italian altarpieces, making this work exceptionally unusual among Venetian Trecento paintings. Jacobello, a follower of Paolo Veneziano, adapted the visionary imagery of St. John's text into the format of a multi-panel devotional altarpiece.

Technical Analysis

Painted in tempera on gold-ground panels, the polyptych translates the fantastic imagery of Revelation into the decorative idiom of Venetian Gothic painting. The visionary scenes employ vivid, saturated colors and fantastic figural inventions set against the characteristic gold backgrounds of Trecento panel painting.

See It In Person

Gallerie dell'Accademia

Venice, Italy

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Quick Facts

Medium
Tempera on wood
Dimensions
95 × 61 cm
Era
Gothic
Style
Italian Gothic
Genre
Religious
Location
Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice
View on museum website →

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