Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Angel Raphael Takes Leave of Old Tobit and his Son Tobias

View through National Gallery of Denmark
Like so many other artists of the day Pieter Lastman went to Rome when his studies were completed. Here, he met artists such as the German painter Adam Elsheimer (1578-1610). Inspired by Elsheimer, Lastman adopted and developed the so-called cabinet pieces, small paintings showing scenes from the Bible, history, or mythology. The painting's story The story of Tobias and his guardian angel, the archangel Raphael, is related in the book of Tobit from the Apocrypha of the Old Testament. It takes place in Ninive, the Assyrian city to which the Israelites had been deported. Tobias faces many trials and tribulations to obtain the medicine he needed for his blind father Tobit. New subject matter As the art theory of the time called for, Lastman made it a point of honour to come up with new subject matter that no other artist had ever depicted. Lastman placed the scene within his own time through the objects used in the still life in the foreground. The silver pitcher in the very elaborate and organic auricular style is by the Dutch silversmith Adam van Vianen (1568/69-1627). He was commissioned to make the piece by the Silversmiths’ Guild in Amsterdam.
image-zoom
Title: The Angel Raphael Takes Leave of Old Tobit and his Son Tobias
Description:
Like so many other artists of the day Pieter Lastman went to Rome when his studies were completed.
Here, he met artists such as the German painter Adam Elsheimer (1578-1610).
Inspired by Elsheimer, Lastman adopted and developed the so-called cabinet pieces, small paintings showing scenes from the Bible, history, or mythology.
The painting's story The story of Tobias and his guardian angel, the archangel Raphael, is related in the book of Tobit from the Apocrypha of the Old Testament.
It takes place in Ninive, the Assyrian city to which the Israelites had been deported.
Tobias faces many trials and tribulations to obtain the medicine he needed for his blind father Tobit.
New subject matter As the art theory of the time called for, Lastman made it a point of honour to come up with new subject matter that no other artist had ever depicted.
Lastman placed the scene within his own time through the objects used in the still life in the foreground.
The silver pitcher in the very elaborate and organic auricular style is by the Dutch silversmith Adam van Vianen (1568/69-1627).
He was commissioned to make the piece by the Silversmiths’ Guild in Amsterdam.

Related Results

Sketchbook
Sketchbook
Sketchbook with black-leather-covered cardboard covers. Sewn page block. Pages of white wove paper, each 34.7 x 27.1 cm. Pages numbered at l.l. of verso in graphite. Drawings i...
Sketchbook
Sketchbook
Sketchbook with black-leather-covered cardboard covers. Sewn page block; pages of off-white wove paper, each 27.2 x 20.8 cm. Drawings made in graphite and in vertical orientation...
Sketchbook
Sketchbook
Sketchbook with beige-fabric-covered cardboard covers. Sewn page block. Pages of off-white wove paper, 37 x 31.2 cm. Pages numbered in graphite at l.l. of verso. Drawings mostl...
Sketchbook
Sketchbook
Sketchbook with blue-and-white marbled cardboard covers. Black fabric tape at spine. Sewn page block; sheets perforated for removal. Pages of off-white wove paper, each 36.7 x 2...
Portrait of a Young Man
Portrait of a Young Man
This portrait was acquired from the Julius Böhler gallery in Berlin in December 1928 as a work by Giulio Romano. The sitter was tentatively identified at that date as Lorenzo de’Me...

Back to Top