
Saint Justina of Padua
Bartolomeo Montagna·1490
Historical Context
Bartolomeo Montagna, who was the leading painter of Vicenza, known for his monumental altarpieces with stern, sculpturally modeled figures, created this work around 1490, now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The depiction of saints was fundamental to the devotional culture of the fifteenth century, with each saint's iconographic attributes carefully codified to ensure proper identification. This work belongs to the High Renaissance, when the innovations of the preceding century were synthesized into works of monumental clarity and ideal beauty.
Technical Analysis
The panel presents the saint with conventional attributes and dignified bearing, employing careful drapery modeling and controlled color to create an image suitable for devotional contemplation.



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