
St Jerome in the Desert
Historical Context
Another of Cima's beloved Saint Jerome compositions, this version at the Hermitage dates to around 1500, when the artist was at the peak of his powers. The penitent scholar-saint offered an ideal vehicle for combining the figure study with the expansive landscape vistas that were Cima's particular strength among Venetian painters. 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
Jerome's gaunt body and cardinal's hat are set against a precisely observed landscape of rocks, trees, and distant hills, with atmospheric perspective creating convincing spatial depth.






