Saint Anthony of Padua (Tura)

Originally placed in the church of San Nicolò in Ferrara,[2] it then passed through several institutions before being acquired by the Italian state for its current owner in 1906.

[3] The painting shows the final developments of Tura's art, marked by a deep and original expressionism with flashes of visionary invention.

The saint is represented very tall, with an emaciated and shocked face and in a reduced color scheme, which makes him look like a grotesque statue.

The folds of his clothing are embossed by the incisive chiaroscuro as if they were made of stone, while some sharp lines, as in his hands, break the smooth course of the figure.

The scene is set in a loggia with a checkerboard floor in perspective and an arch, supported by two Corinthian pillars with pulvinus, beyond which it opens a vast seascape with a lowered horizon, which makes the saint appear even higher.

Saint Anthony of Padua (c. 1484–1490) by Cosmè Tura