Saint Jerome in the Wilderness explained
Saint Jerome in the Wilderness or Saint Jerome in the Desert is a common subject in art depicting Jerome. In practice the same subject is often given titles such as Saint Jerome in Penitence and Saint Jerome Praying (see). Versions usually given a "wilderness" or "desert" title include:
- Saint Jerome in the Wilderness (Leonardo), unfinished painting by Leonardo da Vinci,
- St. Jerome in the Wilderness (Dürer) by Albrecht Durer, executed around 1496
- St. Jerome in the Wilderness (Mantegna) attributed to Andrea Mantegna, c. 1450
- Saint Jerome in the Desert (Pinturicchio) by Pinturicchio, c. 1475–80
- Saint Jerome in the Desert (van der Weyden) by Roger van der Weyden or his studio, c. 1450–1465
- St. Jerome in the Desert (Bellini, Birmingham), Giovanni Bellini's earliest known work from
- St. Jerome in the Desert (Bellini, Florence), a c. 1480 painting by Bellini
- St. Jerome in the Desert (Bellini, Washington), a later Bellini painting
See also