Saint Romanus of Antioch and Saint Barulas

Description

Francisco de Zurbarán excelled at painting altarpieces that presented saints in an accessible manner, as required by the conventions of the Counter-Reformation, the Catholic Church’s effort to oppose the Protestant Reformation and revitalize Catholicism. Catholic reformers emphasized that religious painting should offer easily recognizable figures and narratives in order to be accessible to a contemporary audience. This canvas, made for the high altar of the church of San Román in Seville, Spain, depicts the church’s dedication to Saint Romanus of Antioch. Romanus towers over Saint Barulas, a child of seven, who was inspired to martyrdom by the elder saint’s words. Romanus, himself martyred in 303 under the emperor Diocletian, holds up his own tongue, torn out by his tormentors, and grasps a massive book inscribed with a prayer invoking his intercession on behalf of the faithful.

Provenance

Church of San Roman, Seville, until at least 1800 [Cean Bermudez 1800]; removed by government decree and deposited in the Alcazar, Seville, 1810 [lmaz 1896, no. 11]; taken by Marshal Jean-de-Dieu Soult (1769-1851), 1st Duke of Dalmatia, Paris, by 1812 [see the Getty Provenance Index database, F-23, which lists the painting in Sault's estate inventory of February 5, 1852, as no. 150; date of acquisition according to Delenda 2009]; sale of his estate, Galerie Lebrun, Paris, May 19-22, 1852, lot no. 28, presumably bought in [according to an annotated copy of the sale catalogue, Rijksbureau voor Kunsthistorische Documentatie, The Hague; copies in curatorial file, and Baticle 1999]; by descent to his son, Napoleon-Hector Soult (1802-1857), 2nd Duke of Dalmatia, Paris [according to a postmortem inventory of his collection, dated January 18, 1858; Getty Provenance Index database, F-197, no. 9]; by descent; sold, collection of Marshal Soult, Hotel Drouot, Paris, April 17, 1867, lot no. 6, for 5,330 francs [according to an annotated copy of the sale catalogue, Rijksbureau voor Kunsthistorische Documentatie, The Hague; copy in curatorial file]. Sergei Ivanovich Stchoukine, Paris and Moscow, until 1910 [this and the following according to London 1913; date according to Delenda 2009]. Joachim Caravallo, Château de Villandry, France, from 1910 to 1914. Grafton Galleries, London, from 1914 to 1918 [Kehrer 1918; date according to Delenda 2009]. Charles Deering (1852-1927), Chicago and Miami, by 1918 [Arroyo 1918]; by descent to his daughters, Mrs. Chauncey McCormick (née Marion Deering) and Mrs. Richard Ely Danielson (née Barbara Deering); given to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1947.

Saint Romanus of Antioch and Saint Barulas

Francisco de Zurbarán

1638

Accession Number

61665

Medium

Oil on canvas

Dimensions

246.5 × 185.4 cm (97 1/16 × 73 in.)

Classification

oil on canvas

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Mrs. Chauncey McCormick and Mrs. Richard E. Danielson

Background & Context

Background Story

Francisco de Zurbarán's "Saint Romanus of Antioch and Saint Barulas" (1638) is an oil on canvas depicting two early Christian martyrs. Saint Romanus of Antioch was a deacon martyred in 303 AD during the persecution of Diocletian, and Saint Barulas was a child who was martyred for his faith. According to tradition, Romanus was tortured and executed, and Barulas, a young boy who witnessed his courage and confessed his own faith, was executed alongside him. Zurbarán's painting shows the two saints together, the adult deacon in his ecclesiastical vestments and the young boy at his side. The composition is characteristic of Zurbarán: the figures are presented frontally, with a solid, sculptural presence, against a dark background that focuses attention on their forms. The handling is precise and controlled, the textures of fabric and flesh rendered with remarkable skill. The palette is subdued, with the whites of the vestments and the warm flesh tones standing out against the dark ground. This painting belongs to Zurbarán's mature period, when he was at the height of his reputation and producing some of his finest works.

Cultural Impact

Zurbarán's paintings of saints were central to the Counter-Reformation's use of art as a vehicle for religious instruction and inspiration, presenting models of faith and sacrifice with vivid naturalism.

Why It Matters

This painting of Saint Romanus and Saint Barulas captures the heroic faith of the early Christian martyrs, the solid, sculptural forms and precise handling creating an image of spiritual strength that was both instructive and inspiring.