● On view now — 117A Italian Renaissance
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · verified July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Saint Nicolas of Bari, patron saint of children, sailors, and travelers, and the prototype of Father Christmas, was bishop of Myra (Lycia) in Asia Minor during the AD 300s. His remains were said to have been taken to Bari in Italy during the 11th century. The saint is shown vested as bishop in an elaborately embroidered cope, fastened with a morse, and holding a crosier. By the mid-1400s, most Florentine artists had stopped using gold backgrounds in their pictures, preferring instead naturalistic backgrounds of landscapes and blue skies. However, elsewhere in Italy gold-ground painting remained popular, as in this painting by Crivelli, a a painter of conservative Late Gothic decorative sensibility, who spent his early years in the Veneto where he absorbed influences from the Vivarini, Squarcione, and Mantegna. By 1458 he left the Veneto and was never to return; he spent most of the remainder of his career in the March of Ancona, where he developed a distinctive personal style that makes a contrast to his Venetian contemporary Giovanni Bellini.
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Venetian — Bishop Saint from an Augustinian altarpiece
Venetian — Bishop Saint from an Augustinian altarpiece
anonymous — A Holy Bishop
Vittore Crivelli — St Louis of France
Venetian — Saint Anthony Abbot from an Augustinian altarpiec
French — Altarpiece from Thuison-les-Abbeville: Saint Honoré
Venetian — Saint Nicholas of Tolentino from an Augustinian a
Vittore Crivelli — St Bonaventura
Venetian — Saint Giustina of Padua from an Augustinian altar
Cosmè Tura (Cosimo di Domenico di Bonaventura) — Saint Louis
Workshop of Fra Filippo Lippi — Saint Bernard of Clairvaux
Master E.S. — St. Peter