
Saint Bartholomew
Matteo di Giovanni·1480
Historical Context
Matteo di Giovanni, Siena's leading painter in the late fifteenth century, depicted Saint Bartholomew around 1480. Matteo ran a large workshop that produced altarpieces for churches across Siena and its territories. His forceful, distinctive style combined Sienese linear elegance with an unusual dramatic energy, particularly evident in his multi-figure narrative scenes. This work belongs to the Early Renaissance, the transformative period in European art when painters first applied mathematical perspective, naturalistic figure modeling, and archaeological interest in antiquity to the inherited traditions of medieval devotional painting.
Technical Analysis
Tempera on panel with Matteo's characteristic bold drawing and rich Sienese coloring. The saint's figure displays the monumental presence typical of his single-figure panels.







