Difference between revisions of "Stories from the Life of St. Matthew (1600-1602 Caravaggio), art"

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*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Matthew_and_the_Angel_(Caravaggio) Wikipedia (St. Matthew and the Angel)]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Matthew_and_the_Angel_(Caravaggio) Wikipedia (St. Matthew and the Angel)]


[[Category:Fiction]]
[[Category:Fiction|1600 Caravaggio]]
[[Category:Spanish Fiction|1600 Caravaggio]]
[[Category:Spanish Art|1600 Caravaggio]]
 
[[Category:Art|1600 Caravaggio]]
[[Category:Art|1600 Caravaggio]]
[[Category:Paintings|1600 Caravaggio]]
[[Category:Paintings|1600 Caravaggio]]


[[Category:Made in the 1600s|1600 Caravaggio]]
[[Category:Made in the 1600s|*1600 Caravaggio]]


[[Category:Matthew (subject)|1600 Caravaggio]]
[[Category:Matthew (subject)|1600 Caravaggio]]
[[Category:Recruiting the Tax Collector (subject)|1600 Caravaggio]]
[[Category:Recruiting the Tax Collector (subject)|1600 Caravaggio]]

Revision as of 22:03, 4 November 2010

Stories from the Life of St. Matthew (1600-1602) is a cycle of paintings by Caravaggio.

Abstract

Caravaggio was the first artist to give the character of Matthew a life of his own. His work was celebrated, admired and widely imitated for centuries.

The Life of St. Matthew is illustrated in three episodes:

History and current location

Caravaggio painted the three stories from the life of Matthew to decorate the Contarelli Chapel in the church of San Luigi dei Francesi in Rome [Italy], where they are still located. The original version of the Inspiration of St. Matthew was purchased by Vincenzo Giustiniani for his private collection and eventually ended in Berlin [Germany] at the Kaiser Friedrich Museum, where it was destroyed in 1945 in the last days of World War II.

External links