The Vision of Saint Jerome

Name/Title

The Vision of Saint Jerome

Entry/Object ID

1853.115

Description

Ann Sutherland Harris said: "Of value, worth restoring. Exhibit." She is not convinced it is an autograph reetition, but curators from the Cleveland Museum of Art, the National Gallery of Art in D.C., and the Metropolitan Museum in New York, have seen it and believe it is genuine.

Artwork Details

Medium

Canvas, Oil

Collection

Archabbey-Ludwigmissionsverein

Cataloged By

Kim

Acquisition

Accession

1853.115

Source or Donor

King Ludwig I of Bavaria via Joseph Mueller and Pius Reiser

Acquisition Method

Donation

Credit Line

Gift of King Ludwig I of Bavaria

Made/Created

Artist

Liss, Johann

Date made

circa 1629

Notes

Artist's School: German Technique: Painting

Ethnography

Culture/Tribe

European

Inscription/Signature/Marks

Transcription

autograph repetition

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Painting

Nomenclature Class

Art

Nomenclature Category

Category 08: Communication Objects

LOC Thesaurus for Graphic Materials

Saints

Search Terms

Paintings, Saints, Religious

Other Names and Numbers

Other Numbers

Number Type

Old Number

Other Number

174

Dimensions

Height

81 in

Width

61 in

Accessories

Notes

Frame: Yes

Location

Location

Room

Saint Vincent Gallery

Building

Carey Hall- Gallery

Category

Permanent

Date

February 9, 2025

Location

Room

Saint Vincent Gallery

Building

Carey Hall

Category

Permanent

Condition

Overall Condition

Excellent

Notes

Cleaned and partially restored by Abraham Joel of New York in 1986.

Maintenance

Maintenance History

Date

Nov 15, 2006

Relationships

Related Person or Organization

Person or Organization

Saint Jerome

Related Publications

Notes

Exhibited: Saint Vincent Gallery, Saint Vincent College, 10/26 - 11/03, 1985. "Gifts of a King," 10/05 - 12/21, 1986, Cat. # 17.

Provenance

Notes

Collected By: Boniface Wimmer, O.S.B. King Ludwig I of Bavaria began sending paintings and artwork to Boniface Wimmer in 1853. This work is assumed to be one of the 300 paintings sent during the 1850's. When Wimmer wrote to King Ludwig asking him for artwork to decorate the monastery, churches and to use in the instruction of art King Ludwig ordered Joseph Mueller to send paintings through the Ludwigmissionsverein which was administered by Pius Reiser. It is also assumed that many of these works were from the many artworks confiscated from churches and monasteries by Napoleon and then given over to local princes and kings. It is rumored that over 10,000 such artifacts were assembled in Munich alone, and assumed the 300 sent to Saint Vincent came from this group. Today, there are slightly less than 200 such paintings at Saint Vincent. Some were destroyed, and others were sent to foundations established by Saint Vincent.

Exhibition

5

General Notes

Note

Status: OK

Created By

admin@catalogit.app

Create Date

November 15, 2006

Updated By

admin@catalogit.app

Update Date

February 11, 2025