VMFAEU_100530_0424
Existing comment:
Luca Giordano
St. Paul the Hermit, 1685-90
St. Paul the Hermit was the first of the hermit saints, men whose devout lives made them models for Christian monasticism. In the third century AD, Paul fled into the Egyptian desert to escape the persecutions of Emperor Decius; there he lived a life of austere contemplation. He work only a garment of woven palm leaves and survived on bread that a raven miraculously brought to him daily.
Baroque artists, following the edicts of the Counter-Reformation, tried to make the images of saints and the emotional drama of sacred events as immediate and teal to the worshiper as possible. Giordano's painting of St. Paul faithfully records the effects of age and physical hardship on the saint's face and body. The large figure nearly fills the frame -- his knee even seems to protrude into the viewer's space.
However, this is a painting about a real man meeting with his God; accordingly the heavenly vision toward which the saint turns in ecstasy illuminates the painting with an unearthly brilliance.
Proposed user comment: