Zadar Polyptych

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zadar Polyptych
Vittore carpaccio, san martino e il povero, dal polittico di Zara, 1480-1490 ca.jpg
Saint Martin and the Beggar from the Zadar Polyptych
ArtistVittore Carpaccio
Yearc. 1480-1490
TypeOil on panel
LocationMuseum of Sacred Art, Cathedral, Zadar

The Zadar Polyptych is an oil-on-panel by Italian artist Vittore Carpaccio, painted around 1480–1490. It is now in the Museum of Sacred Art of the Zadar Cathedral, in southern Croatia. It was commissioned by Martin Mladošić, canon, notary and archpresbyter of Nin from Zadar, for the altar of St. Martin in Zadar Cathedral.

Description[]

The polyptych includes six panels in two orders. In the central part of the lower register is the titular of the polyptych, St. Martin, flanked by patron saints of Zadar, St. Anastasia and St. Simeon. The upper register consists of paintings of St. Peter, St. Paul, and St. Jerome. According to records from 1746, during visitation by the archbishop Mate Karaman, it can be assumed that a painting of the Blessed Virgin Mary was once in the uppermost register, but it has since been lost. Ornamental frame, originally connecting polyptych paintings, was created by a local master Ivan of Korčula.

The figures are painted on a background with rocky hills, with no unitary treatment of the landscape based on geometric perspective but, as in Gentile Bellini's works, with a series of separate blocks.

Sources[]

  • Peter Humfrey, Carpaccio, Chaucer Press (2005)
  • Jadranka Baković, Conservation and Restoration of the Polyptych of St. Martin by Vittore Carpaccio, Croatian Conservation Institute (2017)

See also[]

  • Venetian school (art)

External links[]

  • Paintings by Vittore Carpaccio
  • Sunara, Sagita Mirjam (December 2011). "Restauriranje poliptiha Vittorea Carpaccia iz zadarske katedrale nakon Drugog svjetskog rata" [Restoration of the polyptych by Vittore Carpaccio from the Zadar Cathedral after the Second World War] (PDF). Portal (in Croatian) (2): 135–146. Retrieved 19 January 2016.
Retrieved from ""