EMILIAN SCHOOL, SECOND HALF OF THE 14TH CENTURY
EMILIAN SCHOOL, SECOND HALF OF THE 14TH CENTURY
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PROPERTY FROM A EUROPEAN PRIVATE COLLECTION
EMILIAN SCHOOL, SECOND HALF OF THE 14TH CENTURY

Christ as the Man of Sorrows

Details
EMILIAN SCHOOL, SECOND HALF OF THE 14TH CENTURY
Christ as the Man of Sorrows
tempera on gold ground panel, in its original engaged frame
12 ¼ x 8 7⁄8 in. (31.3 x 22.6 cm.)
with its original painted reverse
Provenance
with Matteo Salamon, Milan, where acquired by the present owner in 2019.

Brought to you by

Lucy Speelman
Lucy Speelman Junior Specialist, Head of Day Sale

Lot Essay


Although the attribution of this pathos-inspiring depiction of Christ as the Man of Sorrows remains a mystery, it was almost certainly painted by an artist working in either what is today Emilia-Romagna or Lombardy. A number of parallels can be found with works like the painting of the same subject given to Jacobello del Bonomo (National Gallery, London), an artist who spent part of his career in Rimini. The painting equally recalls in some ways the works of Vitale da Bologna, which, as in the case of the artist’s Crucifixion (Thyssen-Bornemisza Museo Nacional, Madrid), Pietà with Saints (Fondazione R. Longhi, Florence) and frescoed Crucifixion (Basilica di San Martino, Bologna) display a similar interest in the highly stylised depiction of the emaciated Christ’s torso.

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