SACCHI, Andrea
(b. 1599, Nettuno, d. 1661, Roma)

Sts Anthony Abbot and Francis of Assisi

before 1627
Oil on canvas, 61 x 78 cm
National Gallery, London

Holding a book that seems to thrust forward out of the picture plane is St Anthony Abbot, identified by the tau- (T-) shaped walking stick he used in later life. He also wears a black habit, which his followers, the Antonine monks, later adopted. Next to him, slightly set back, is St Francis of Assisi, with his dark brown friar's habit and a bloody wound on his hand. This is one of the stigmata – the five wounds suffered by Christ on the Cross, which were miraculously visited on the saint.

Sacchi has created a simple but effective contrast between the two meditative saints. They appear to share the same physical space, lit by a bright, raking light from the left, but they seem unaware of each other. Saint Anthony is immersed in his studies; Saint Francis's hands are crossed in religious submission, and his gaze is turned heavenwards.