Artist: Giovanni Bellini (Italian, c. 1430-1516) (1483-1520)
Title: Procession of the Virgin
Medium: Antique engraving on wove paper after the original by the master engraver Johann Leonhard Raab (German, 1825-1899).
Signature: Signed in the plate.
Dimensions: Image Size 7 7/8 x 9 5/8 inches.
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 17 x 19 inches.
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
Five female saints, seen three-quarter length, with on the left St Catherine of Siena holding a lily and a book, and standing by her side St Ursula wearing a richly embroidered dress and holding a small vase; behind them stand the three remaining figures.
Bellini was one of the most influential Venetian artists. He lived and worked in Venice all his life; his career spanned 65 years. He is celebrated for his pioneering portrayal of natural light, seen in such works as ‘The Agony in the Garden’, for his tender and graceful pictures of the Virgin and for his altarpieces. Dürer, in Venice in about 1506, wrote that Giovanni ‘is very old and yet he is the best painter of all’. Giovanni Bellini was born into the leading dynasty of Venetian painters. He seems to have been the younger brother of Gentile Bellini. His development was first shaped by his father, Jacopo. His brother-in-law Andrea Mantegna also influenced early works, such as ‘The Blood of the Redeemer’ and ‘The Agony in the Garden’. The visit of Antonello da Messina to Venice in 1475-6 may also have influenced him. Many signed paintings survive, as well as a number of workshop productions, including works on this screen. ‘The Assassination of Saint Peter Martyr’ is now thought to be by him rather than by his workshop. In his old age Bellini executed a few secular narrative paintings, of which the greatest is ‘The Feast of the Gods’, later modified by Titian.