The Martyrdom of Saint Bartholomew (Tiepolo)
The Martyrdom of Saint Bartholomew is a 1722 oil on canvas painting by Giambattista Tiepolo, produced during the first years he was active in Venice. It still hangs in the church of San Stae in the city, for which it was painted.
In his will, the Venetian patrician Andrea Stazzio left a sizeable sum to produce paintings on the lives of the twelve apostles by Tiepolo, Sebastiano Ricci, Giovanni Antonio Pellegrini and other artists, all to be hung in the nave of San Stae, though they were later moved to the chancel. Francisco Goya very probably saw Tiepolo's work during his trip to Italy in 1771 - Tiepolo worked in Madrid for a time and Goya certainly knew and appreciated his work. Glendinning argues that the work's violence was an influence on Goya's The Third of May 1808.[1]
References
- (in Spanish) Nigel Glendinning, Francisco de Goya, Madrid, Arlanza, Biblioteca Descubrir el Arte, 2005 ISBN 84-95503-40-9