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Saint Roch Cured by the Angel
Moretto da Brescia·1545
Historical Context
Saint Roch Cured by the Angel from 1545 at the Budapest Museum shows the plague saint being healed by divine intervention. Saint Roch was widely venerated in northern Italy as protection against epidemic disease. The miraculous healing of Saint Roch by an angel during his plague illness was depicted as a moment of divine tenderness—the celestial physician tending the earthly wound—that resonated powerfully in plague-threatened cities. 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 composition pairs the suffering saint with the healing angel. Moretto's silvery palette and naturalistic handling create a scene of divine compassion.
Look Closer
- ◆The plague wound on Roch's thigh is indicated beneath his parted robe — the specific injury that required the angel's miraculous healing.
- ◆The angel's touch on the wound is painted with delicate lightness — divine contact requiring no force, only the presence of the holy.
- ◆Roch's face combines physical suffering with spiritual trust: the saint is in pain but not in despair, the two conditions held in balance.
- ◆The dog that traditionally accompanies Saint Roch appears at his side, Moretto including the faithful animal as Roch's only earthly companion.







