SANTACROCE, Girolamo da - b. ~1482 Santa Croce, d. ~1556 Venezia - WGA

SANTACROCE, Girolamo da

(b. ~1482 Santa Croce, d. ~1556 Venezia)

Italian painter. He was a pupil of Gentile Bellini, who in his will (1507) left him half of the drawings of oriental figures that he had lent to Bernardino Pinturicchio. Afterwards Santacroce was probably employed in the workshops of Giovanni Bellini and Cima and was evidently influenced by Titian and by Palma Vecchio. He was typical of the jobbing painters who produced copies of the works of the great contemporary masters for sale to sometimes quite discerning clients.

There are many signed and often dated examples of his prolific output. The earliest of these is the Ryerson Madonna and Child (1516; Chicago, Art Institut), the latest the Last Supper (Venice, S Martino) and a polyptych depicting the Virgin and Child with Saints (Split, Our Lady of Poljud), both dated 1549. Many other paintings are traceable to his workshop or attributable to either Girolamo or his son Francesco (1516-84) with whom he is easily confused in his last phase. Among his lost works is the Virgin and Child with St Lorenzo Giustiniani, painted for the church of the Madonna dell’Orto, Venice, in 1525 and two paintings of the Head of the Saviour, executed in collaboration with Lorenzo Lotto for SS Giovanni e Paolo, Venice, in 1542.

Christ and the Woman of Samaria
Christ and the Woman of Samaria by

Christ and the Woman of Samaria

Another version of Santacroce’s Christ and the Woman of Samaria, of almost identical dimensions, can be found in the Museo Borgogna, Vercelli along with a pendant, Noli me tangere, begging the question whether the present painting may also have initially formed part of a pair.

St John the Baptist
St John the Baptist by

St John the Baptist

This panel is a free copy after the central panel of a triptych by the Bellini workshop (once in Berlin, Staatliche Museen, destroyed during World War II.) The frontality of the figure is a witness to the fact that in Venice, so closely associated with Byzantinum over the centuries, oriental influences appeared from time to time even during the flowering of the Renaissance.

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