Main content
Europe 1300 - 1800
Course: Europe 1300 - 1800 > Unit 9
Lesson 5: Spain and Portugal- A Still Life of Global Dimensions: Antonio de Pereda’s Still Life with Ebony Chest
- Juan Sanchez de Cotán, Quince, Melon and Cucumber
- Velázquez, The Waterseller of Seville
- Velázquez, Los Borrachos or the Triumph of Bacchus
- Velázquez, Vulcan's Forge
- Velázquez, The Surrender of Breda
- Velázquez, Las Meninas
- Velázquez, Las Meninas
- Zurbarán, The Martyrdom of Saint Serapion
- Ribera, Martyrdom of Saint Philip
- Jerónimo de Balbás, Altar of the Kings (Altar de los Reyes)
- Making a Spanish polychrome sculpture
- Pedro de Mena, Ecce Homo and Mater Dolorosa
- Juan Martínez Montañés and Francisco Pacheco, Christ of Clemency
- Bartolomé Esteban Murillo, The Immaculate Conception of Los Venerables
- Josefa de Óbidos, Christ Child as Salvator Mundi
- The Abduction of Helen Tapestry
- Baroque art in Spain
© 2023 Khan AcademyTerms of usePrivacy PolicyCookie Notice
Ribera, Martyrdom of Saint Philip
Jusepe (José) de Ribera, The Martyrdom of Saint Philip, 1639, oil on canvas, 92 x 92 in. (234 x 234 cm), (Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid) Speakers: Dr. Beth Harris, Dr. Steven Zucker The English Romantic poet, Lord Byron, wrote that the artist, "Spagnoletto [the little Spaniard] tainted/His brush with all the blood of all the sainted" (Don Juan , xiii. 71). Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.
Want to join the conversation?
- If their on a ship why does it look like rocks at the bottom of the canvas?(3 votes)
- Hi knott.lm, you are right. This did not take place on a ship.(2 votes)
- Does anyone else think the woman with the child is ST. Phillips wife? Was there any restitution,or paying for your crime other than death?(1 vote)
- Crucifiction was a form of punishment that was not inflicted upon Roman citizens unless they were considered traitors to the state. Murders of non citizens or slaves could be renumerated with payment to the owners, and in the twelve tables of roman law many crimes could be redeemed with fines.(2 votes)
- How were people crucified in the BC(1 vote)
- From what i have researched there were different ways to crucify. Some were hung upside down. Some with hands directly above the head, stretched tight to make it harder to breathe, with legs bent upward so you could only take a shortbreath while pushing yourself upward with your feet. So very cruel.(2 votes)
- Could the woman with the baby be Saint Phillip's wife? 'Cause she's looking away from the scene unfolding before her in a kind of grieving sadness. Did he have a wife?(1 vote)
- Is it just me, or is Philip's head way too small for his body?(1 vote)
- AtWhy did so many people attend crucifictions? Other than family. Was it for loving support, or a more morbid reason? When was the first crucifiction? Also did the Romans start such a horrible execution for crimes comitted? 10:07(0 votes)
- Its impossible to know when the first crucifiction was performed, as examples are known of in ancient Persia. Crowds often formed around crucifixions as this was a punishment intended to inspire fear in the public, to remind them of the consequences of disobedience with a morbid spectacle equal to the enormity of the crime. This was done in England in fairly recent times with the use of a gibbet(a cage to hold the head or body of an elected criminal for display), and in fact, a cross is a form of gibbet.(2 votes)
- what is the person in red doing?(1 vote)
- It is a process that keeps one from getting oxygen into the lungs, also gives no releif to the muscles, always holding the weight of the body. Putting more added work, and stress on the heart. A slow and horrible death. The man in red seems to be enjoying his job.(1 vote)
- Whats going on in this painting? Is he getting crucificted? It looks sad and struggeling.(0 votes)
- I don't think he's on a ship. I think he is being hoisted up as a sail would for his crucifixion.(6 votes)
Video transcript
(jazzy music) Male: We're in the Prado in Madrid and we're looking at a Ribera. Female: It's The
Martyrdom of Saint Philip. It's a very disturbing image. St. Philip is being raised up on a cross to be crucified, and so
we have this moment of, actually we often have in Baroque art, for example Ruben's The
Elevation of the Cross, sort of the preparation, the in motion progress of time toward the martyrdom. Male: It allows Ruben's, or in this case, Ribera, to emphasize the
physicality of the image. That is, look at the muscles. Look at the strain. Look at the effort to counterbalance the weight of this man that
is about to be martyred. But then what I find so extraordinary is the handling of the body of St. Philip, this series of concavities, of shadows, that are already deforming and distorting the body, even before he's raised up. You can feel the body's strength. You can see the muscles
of the legs, of the arms, but you can also see a kind of hollowness, especially in the torso, that makes him feel so vulnerable. Female: Looking at his face, I see that influence of Caravaggio. He looks very humble. Male: A fisherman. Female: There's nothing idealized about really any of these figures. We have that Baroque stark
contrast between light and dark. If you look at his left arm reaching up tied to the wood of the cross, you can see that that line of mottling there is just dark shadow right against the color of his flesh that's illuminated. Male: In fact, there's
a kind of undulation which is the kind of undulation one would expect to see in Baroque architecture. Female: I'm also noticing
how, as we look at it here, that the composition is
kind of a half circle on the bottom of the canvas also echoed in his harms reaching up. Male: That's exactly
what I meant when I said that it felt hollow, that
it was a kind of concavity. I think that that really, in a sense, emphasizes the vulnerability and the way in which his body is not
under his own control. In fact, the figure on the right seems to be pulling his
legs out from under him so he really is about to lose his balance and is about to be at the
complete mercy of his torturers. Female: There's that thing that we always see in Baroque art, too, of
intentional foreshortening of figures who move out into our space; that figure in red that
you just mentioned, whose torso is
foreshortened, who comes out into our space; the figures on the left who are pulling up the ropes
move out into our space. The figure of St. Philip himself
is very, very close to us. There's not a lot happening
in the background. All we've got is Classical columns that maybe signify the
end of the Classical era and the beginning of a Christian era. Male: There's also an interesting contrast between the lower part of the canvas, which is so dense with this terror, so dense with this violence, and then the sort of open, perfect, beautiful blue of the sky above, which I'm assuming is a kind
of spiritual redemption. Female: I'm also really noticing the mother and child figure in the lower left. That somehow makes what's happening to St. Philip seem
especially tragic somehow. Something about the Baroque realism, the everyday-ness, the
way that Baroque artists recreate these religious scenes in a sort of vernacular language. (jazzy music)