St. Jerome in the Desert (Bellini, Birmingham) explained

St. Jerome in the Desert
Artist:Giovanni Bellini
Year:c. 1450
Medium:egg tempera on wood
Height Metric:44
Width Metric:39
City:Birmingham
Museum:Barber Institute of Fine Arts

St. Jerome in the Desert is an egg tempera painting on wood by the Italian Renaissance artist Giovanni Bellini, from c. 1450. It is held in the Barber Institute of Fine Arts in Birmingham, England.

Universally recognised as Bellini's earliest surviving work, painted when he was around 16, it depicts Saint Jerome shown semi-naked seated on a rock in front of his cave in the Syrian Desert with a book in his left hand, referring to his life as a hermit and as the producer of the Vulgate Bible, and his faithful lion in front of him. The saint appears in the gesture of giving him a blessing, while the lion still has the famous thorn on his paw, which according to the legend was removed by Jerome.