Conversion of Saul (recto and verso)
Maker
(artist)
1503-1540
1503-1540
Title
Conversion of Saul (recto and verso)
Date of Production
(circa) 1524 - 1526
Medium
traces of black chalk, pen and brown ink, brown wash, white bodycolour (recto), traces of black chalk, pen and brown ink, brown wash (verso) on laid paper
Dimensions
Height: 23.7 cm
Width: 32.9 cm
Width: 32.9 cm
Accession Number
D.1978.PG.360
Mode of Acquisition
Count Antoine Seilern, bequest, 1978
Credit
The Courtauld, London (Samuel Courtauld Trust)
Copyright
Work in the public domain
Location
Not currently on display
Keywords
Label Text
(recto) This highly finished ink drawing depicts the dramatic moment in the biblical narrative when the fervent persecutor of Christians, Saul, converts to Christianity. Struck from his horse, Saul turns towards the voice of Christ who suddenly appears from the heavens. Saul’s accompanying soldiers step back from the apparition while one figure strains to help his horse to its feet. Through careful application of wash and highlighting Parmigianino creates a dynamic scene composed of highly modelled, muscular figures.
(verso) Within the story of the conversion of Saint Paul this image captures a slightly later scene than the one on the other side of the sheet. Here, Paul is shown responding to Christ, his kneeling posture and gesture already expressing submission to his new vocation. The broader, calmer use of wash corresponds to the less dramatic character of the composition. In the background, rolling hills and a linear representation of the city of Damascus foreshadow Paul’s symbolic re-entry as a converted sinner.
(verso) Within the story of the conversion of Saint Paul this image captures a slightly later scene than the one on the other side of the sheet. Here, Paul is shown responding to Christ, his kneeling posture and gesture already expressing submission to his new vocation. The broader, calmer use of wash corresponds to the less dramatic character of the composition. In the background, rolling hills and a linear representation of the city of Damascus foreshadow Paul’s symbolic re-entry as a converted sinner.
Notes
Recto: This highly finished ink drawing depicts the dramatic moment in the biblical narrative when the fervent persecutor of Christians Saul converts to Christianity. Struck from his horse, Saul turns towards the voice of Christ who suddenly appears from the heavens. Saul’s accompanying soldiers step back from the apparition while one figure strains to help his horse to its feet. Through careful application of wash and highlighting Parmigianino creates a dynamic scene composed of highly modelled, muscular figures. Verso: Within the story of the conversion of Saint Paul this image captures a slightly later scene than the one on the other side of the sheet. Here, Paul is shown responding to Christ, his kneeling posture and gesture already expressing submission to his new vocation. The broader, calmer use of wash corresponds to the less dramatic character of the composition. In the background, rolling hills and a linear representation of the city of Damascus foreshadow Paul’s symbolic re-entry as a converted sinner.
Both recto and verso of this impressive ink study depict a scene from the Conversion of Saul, a biblical episode derived from the Acts of the Apostles, in which the Jewish commander, Saul of the Saracens, on his way to Damascus, is struck from his horse by a heavenly apparition. The recto depicts the moment when Saul turns and gestures in the direction of Christ, who appears from the heavens. Saul’s panicked horse is supported by one of his soldiers, while a further three soldiers draw back from the apparition. The drawing on the verso is a scene of less dramatic action; almost divided into three constituent parts in order to suggest a sense of narrative. In the centre, Saul rises from the ground, Christ’s hand a few inches from Saul’s forehead. To Saul’s right, his horse stands, its front legs raised from the ground, its head turned back toward the soldiers who are gathered behind it. To give a sense of time and place to the drawing, Parmigianino suggested a vision of the city of Damascus over some rolling hills in the background to the right of the composition, foreshadowing Saul’s symbolic entry to the city as a reformed sinner.
The drawings are generally accepted as preparatory studies for the completed Conversion of Saul in the Kunsthistoriches Museum in Vienna. In his ‘Life of Parmigianino’ Vasari refers to a ‘panel of a Conversion of Saint Paul with many figures’ which was painted for Giovanni Bianchi, an anatomy lecturer at the University of Bologna.[1] Therefore the studies have been dated to between 1527 and 1530: the period of Parmigianino’s sojourn in Bologna, following his flight from the Sack of Rome. Stylistically the figural studies on recto and verso correspond to Parmigianino’s co-eval works: the kneeling figure of Paul on the verso of the drawing reminiscent of both John the Baptist in the National Gallery Vision of Saint Jerome, painted in Rome in 1527, and ink studies for the Saint Roch with a Donor, which was commissioned for a Bolognese patron in 1527.
Hugo Chapman has noted that there is not a significant stylistic difference between the drawings executed by Parmigianino while he was in Rome and Bologna; his preferred medium in both locations was pen and ink, with white gouache highlighting.[2] Recto and verso display a different handling of the medium: on the recto Parmigianino uses the wash to create a highly modelled composition, dominated by strong chiaroscuro and softened angles, while the verso demonstrates a tighter use of wash and a broader use of pen. Given that Parmigianino was living with the engraver Antonio da Trento in Bologna, it is possible that the ink studies were initially intended as modelli, preparatory studies for engravings, for an early project with da Trento.[3] Parmigianino collaborated with da Trento on six prints, the earliest of which was likely the chiaroscuro woodcut of The Martyrdom of Saints Peter and Paul (fig. 1).[4] While the compositional complexity in PG.360 differs from Parmigianino’s design for the Martyrdom, there is a certain similarity in the sense of narrative dynamism of the drawings, and indeed the Conversion of Saul would have seemed a fitting partner to the theme of the Martyrdom of Peter and Paul.[5] Parmigianino’s exposure to the Roman maniera moderna is observable in elements such as the torsion of the fallen body of Saint Paul on the recto, which recalls Heliodorus in Raphael’s Expulsion of Heliodorus from the Temple, and Paul’s horse on the recto, the muscularity of which is reminiscent of Giulio Romano’s Battle of Constantine.[6] Parmigianino combined his study of contemporary Roman works with reference to the antique: the upwards gaze of Paul on the verso recalls the gaze of the Laocoon, which was known to Parmigianino. In both studies, Parmigianino depicts a single moment, which is simultaneously of transformative stasis and vivid motion, effectuated by Parmigianino’s use of line, light and shade, rendered with speed and accuracy to create studies in which the primacy of disegno makes manifest what Giorgio Vasari’s intended for maniera moderna.
[1] Vasari 1994, IV, p. 539; Lamo 1844, 22.
[2] Chapman 2000, p. 22
[3] Vasari, vol. IV, 539-40; Gregory, 2012, 36.
[4] Franklin, 2003, 210- 214. The drawing of the Martyrdom in the British Museum is dated 1527, and a surviving print by Jacopo Caraglio (The Metropolitan, New York) testifies to a collaboration between the two artists shortly prior to the Sack of Rome in 1527.
[5]Franklin, 2003, 214. Franklin acknowledges that Parmigianino’s projects with Da Trento are characterised by a greater reliance on linearity than those with Caraglio, due to a realisation that the compositional drawn designs required simplification in order to facilitate the printmaker’s role.
[6] Karpati, 2009 20.
Bibliography:
CHAPMAN 2000
Correggio and Parmigianino: Master Draughtsmen of the Renaissance, eds. C. Bambach, H. Chapman, M. Clayton and G.R. Goldner, exh. cat., London, 2000.
FRANKLIN 2004
David Franklin, The Art of Parmigianino, New Haven and London, 2003. GREGORY 2012
Sharon Gregory, Vasari and the Renaissance Print, Aldershot, 2012.
LAMO 1844
Pietro Lamo, Graticola di Bologna: Ossia descrizione delle pitture, sculture e Architetture di detta Città, Bologna, 1844.
VASARI 1994
Giorgio Vasari, Le vite de’ più excellenti pittori, scultori e architettori: nelle redazioni del 1500 e 1568, Paola Barocchi and Rosanna Bettarini (eds.), IV, Florence, 1994.
Provenance
possibly an unidentified collector (red chalk paraphe on verso, not on Lugt); unidentified collector, possibly Jean de la Morinerie, L.1493a (lower right); Paul Prouté (Paris) (his graphite inscription on verso, identified by his heirs); Hugh Squire, London; purchased from him by Colnaghi (London); purchased there by Count Antoine Seilern, London (1901-1978), 7 June 1962 (£5,000); Princes Gate Bequest 1978
Exhibition History
Drawings Gallery Display - The Art of Experiment: Parmigianino at The Courtauld, The Courtauld Gallery, London, 03/05/2022-06/05/2022
Drawings Gallery Display - Renaissance Modern, The Courtauld Gallery, London, 22/04/2015-07/06/2015
Correggio and Parmigianino: master draughtsmen of the Renaissance, British Museum, London, 06/10/2000-07/01/2001 ...More
Master Drawings from the Courtauld Collections, Courtauld Institute Galleries, London, 16/10/1991-19/01/1992
Parmigianino - Paintings, Drawings, Prints, The Courtauld Gallery, London, 14/05/1987-12/07/1987
The Princes Gate Collection - Drawings (Selection B), The Courtauld Gallery, London, 29/01/1982-25/07/1982 ...Less
Drawings Gallery Display - Renaissance Modern, The Courtauld Gallery, London, 22/04/2015-07/06/2015
Correggio and Parmigianino: master draughtsmen of the Renaissance, British Museum, London, 06/10/2000-07/01/2001 ...More
Master Drawings from the Courtauld Collections, Courtauld Institute Galleries, London, 16/10/1991-19/01/1992
Parmigianino - Paintings, Drawings, Prints, The Courtauld Gallery, London, 14/05/1987-12/07/1987
The Princes Gate Collection - Drawings (Selection B), The Courtauld Gallery, London, 29/01/1982-25/07/1982 ...Less
Literature
The Art of Experiment: Parmigianino at The Courtauld, The Courtauld Gallery, London, 2022
cat. no. 5a
pp. 54-55, 58
ill. on pp. 56 (recto), 57 (verso)
Parmigianino: The Conversion of Saul. From the Collection of the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. An Exhibition part of the Masterpieces of World Museums at the Hermitage series (illustrated booklet), The Hermitage, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 16 June - 28 September 2008, 2008
? in Russian
ill. on p. 18 (recto)
Gnann, Achim, Parmigianino: Die Zeichnungen, Petersberg 2007
vol. I, p. 138 and vol. II, no. 450
vol. II, p. 361 (recto and verso) ...More
Fadda, Elisabetta and Mario di Giampaolo, Parmigianino: catalogo completo dei dipinti, Santarcangelo di Romagna: Idea Libri 2003
p. 88
Vaccaro, Mary, Parmigianino: the paintings, Turin 2002
pp. 164-65
figs. 23b-c
Chiusa, Maria Christina, Parmigianino, Milan 2001
p. 145
Correggio and Parmigianino: master draughtsmen of the Renaissance, British Museum, London; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2000-2001, 2000-01
cat. no. 97
ill. on p. 147 (recto and verso)
dated c. 1527-8; exh. London only
Master Drawings from the Courtauld Collections, Courtauld Institute Galleries, London, 1991
cat. no. 54
pp. 116, 186-87
ill. on p. 117 (recto and verso)
Parmigianino - Paintings, Drawings, Prints, Courtauld, London, 1987
cat. no. 23
ill. on p. 11 (verso)
verso exhibited
Oberhuber, Konrad, 1986
p. 167 under no. 60
on PRA task list to get publication title
Nell'età di Correggio e dei Carracci, Bologna, Washington and New York 1986-87
p. 167 under no. 60
entry author: Helen Braham
The Princes Gate Collection - Drawings (Selection B), The Courtauld Gallery, London, 1982
cat. no. 174
ill. on p. 124 (recto)
Rossi, Paola, L'opera completa del Parmigianino, Milan 1980
under no. 37
Popham, A. E., Catalogue of the Drawings of Parmigianino, New Haven and London 1971
no. 768 (recto and verso reversed)
pls. 222 (recto) and 223 (verso)
dated c. 1527-31
Seilern, Count Antoine, Italian paintings and drawings at 56 Princes Gate, London SW7. Addenda, London 1969; V
no. 360
pls. XLIV, XLV
dated c. 1524-7 ...Less
cat. no. 5a
pp. 54-55, 58
ill. on pp. 56 (recto), 57 (verso)
Parmigianino: The Conversion of Saul. From the Collection of the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. An Exhibition part of the Masterpieces of World Museums at the Hermitage series (illustrated booklet), The Hermitage, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 16 June - 28 September 2008, 2008
? in Russian
ill. on p. 18 (recto)
Gnann, Achim, Parmigianino: Die Zeichnungen, Petersberg 2007
vol. I, p. 138 and vol. II, no. 450
vol. II, p. 361 (recto and verso) ...More
Fadda, Elisabetta and Mario di Giampaolo, Parmigianino: catalogo completo dei dipinti, Santarcangelo di Romagna: Idea Libri 2003
p. 88
Vaccaro, Mary, Parmigianino: the paintings, Turin 2002
pp. 164-65
figs. 23b-c
Chiusa, Maria Christina, Parmigianino, Milan 2001
p. 145
Correggio and Parmigianino: master draughtsmen of the Renaissance, British Museum, London; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2000-2001, 2000-01
cat. no. 97
ill. on p. 147 (recto and verso)
dated c. 1527-8; exh. London only
Master Drawings from the Courtauld Collections, Courtauld Institute Galleries, London, 1991
cat. no. 54
pp. 116, 186-87
ill. on p. 117 (recto and verso)
Parmigianino - Paintings, Drawings, Prints, Courtauld, London, 1987
cat. no. 23
ill. on p. 11 (verso)
verso exhibited
Oberhuber, Konrad, 1986
p. 167 under no. 60
on PRA task list to get publication title
Nell'età di Correggio e dei Carracci, Bologna, Washington and New York 1986-87
p. 167 under no. 60
entry author: Helen Braham
The Princes Gate Collection - Drawings (Selection B), The Courtauld Gallery, London, 1982
cat. no. 174
ill. on p. 124 (recto)
Rossi, Paola, L'opera completa del Parmigianino, Milan 1980
under no. 37
Popham, A. E., Catalogue of the Drawings of Parmigianino, New Haven and London 1971
no. 768 (recto and verso reversed)
pls. 222 (recto) and 223 (verso)
dated c. 1527-31
Seilern, Count Antoine, Italian paintings and drawings at 56 Princes Gate, London SW7. Addenda, London 1969; V
no. 360
pls. XLIV, XLV
dated c. 1524-7 ...Less
Inscriptions
Watermark: Watermark: centre: too unclear to identify.
Inscription: Recto: upper left corner, red chalk, unclear: "3-" [?]. Verso: upper right corner, red chalk, filigree: "Ch. E8" [not found on Lugt but has appearance of a collector’s mark, send to Lugt]; lower right corner, graphite, supralined, mark of Paul Prouté (according to e-mail correspondence from his heirs) : "1 1an" [? or 1 Jan?].
Collector's mark: Verso: upper right corner, red chalk, filigree: "Ch. E8" [not found on Lugt but has appearance of a paraphe]; lower right, stamped in red: unidentified collector, possibly Jean de la Morinerie (L.1493a).
Inscription: Recto: upper left corner, red chalk, unclear: "3-" [?]. Verso: upper right corner, red chalk, filigree: "Ch. E8" [not found on Lugt but has appearance of a collector’s mark, send to Lugt]; lower right corner, graphite, supralined, mark of Paul Prouté (according to e-mail correspondence from his heirs) : "1 1an" [? or 1 Jan?].
Collector's mark: Verso: upper right corner, red chalk, filigree: "Ch. E8" [not found on Lugt but has appearance of a paraphe]; lower right, stamped in red: unidentified collector, possibly Jean de la Morinerie (L.1493a).
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