NICCOLÒ DI PIETRO
(known 1394-1440 in Venice)

St Benedict Raising a Young Monk

1415-20
Tempera on wood, 111 x 66 cm
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence

This scene is part of a series of four episodes from the life of Benedict of Nursia, inspired by the Vita Sancti Benedicti written by Gregorio Magno, divided between the Uffizi Galleries and the Poldi Pezzoli Museum in Milan. They were probably part of an altarpiece dedicated to the saint, and despite their destination not being entirely known, they were most likely destined to the Benedictine order.

The four scenes are the following:

  1. St Benedict Makes his Nurse's Broken Sieve Whole (Uffizi)
  2. St Benedict and the Poisoned Wine (Uffizi)
  3. St Benedict Raising a Young Monk (Uffizi)
  4. St Benedict Tempted in the Wilderness (Poldi Pezzoli)

In the third scene the story goes that St Benedict once came across a young monk who was distracted from praying by the devil. St Benedict exorcised the monk, hitting him repeatedly with a staff, as can be seen in the painting, in which the saint rests a thin stick on the head of the kneeling monk, freeing him from the demon's presence. Two other monks watch on, astounded. In Niccolò di Pietro's painting, the devil rushes off in such a hurry that he breaks the column of the mullioned window with his flight. This episode takes place inside a church, before the altar, under a triptych that shows the Redeemer and two saints, with a lamp hanging from the ceiling in front.

Although studies cannot agree on a definitive author, the paintings seem to be the work of Niccolò di Pietro, one of the most important artists working in Venice and north-western Italy during the affirmation of international Gothic style. With regard to the stories of St Benedict and Niccolò's narrative and descriptive skills, it has been hypothesized that the ideation was aided by Gentile da Fabriano, with whom Niccolò di Pietro was certainly in contact in 1408.




© Web Gallery of Art, created by Emil Krén and Daniel Marx.