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Source Description

This panel is from a series illustrating critical events in the life of the biblical figure Susanna. As told in the Old Testament Book of Daniel, Susanna was a young Babylonian woman who was accosted by two lecherous old judges while bathing in her private garden. After rejecting their advances, the judges accused Susanna of adultery and she was sentenced to death. But through the just intervention of a young nobleman named Daniel, Susanna was proven innocent and her virtue preserved. This panel represents the beginning of the story and shows the two elders seated as judges. It was originally followed by a panel of the elders spying on Susanna (a likely fragment of which is now at the Pushkin Museum in Moscow), which was in turn followed by a panel depicting Susanna’s arrest (now lost or unidentified). There are two more extant panels from the series. One of Daniel’s interrogating the judges is (2019) with a dealer in Bologna; the judges' subsequent death by stoning is thought to be in a private collections. The series probably functioned as a set of small “spalliere," paintings installed in the wainscoting of a palace bedchamber at shoulder height (“spalla” meaning “shoulder” in Italian). The story of Susanna was a popular in the Renaissance as model example of chastity and the application of good and fair judgment. For another set of larger spalliera panels depicting the story, see Walters 37.480, 37.485 and 37.490.Born and trained in the north Italian city of Ferrara, Lorenzo Costa moved to Bologna in 1483 where he worked for the powerful Bentivoglio family. In 1507 he moved to Mantua and was appointed as court painter to that city's ruling family, the Gonzaga. The Susanna series is probably among Costa's earlier works from the late 1480s. The sculptural, hard-edged style is close to his Bentivoglio altarpiece, dated 1488, in the church of San Giacomo Maggiore, Bologna. The careful, symmetrical structuring of the architecture conveys a sense of societal stability that is of course misleading in this story of corruption within the halls of justice. The purple-red (porphyry) roundel prominently placed on the dais is a traditional symbol indicating a site of power.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
28440
label
The Story of Susanna: The Elders as Judges
core
obj
dtoType
drawing
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
28440
contentType
drawing
stage
normalized
title
The Story of Susanna: The Elders as Judges
description
This panel is from a series illustrating critical events in the life of the biblical figure Susanna. As told in the Old Testament Book of Daniel, Susanna was a young Babylonian woman who was accosted by two lecherous old judges while bathing in her private garden. After rejecting their advances, the judges accused Susanna of adultery and she was sentenced to death. But through the just intervention of a young nobleman named Daniel, Susanna was proven innocent and her virtue preserved. This panel represents the beginning of the story and shows the two elders seated as judges. It was originally followed by a panel of the elders spying on Susanna (a likely fragment of which is now at the Pushkin Museum in Moscow), which was in turn followed by a panel depicting Susanna’s arrest (now lost or unidentified). There are two more extant panels from the series. One of Daniel’s interrogating the judges is (2019) with a dealer in Bologna; the judges' subsequent death by stoning is thought to be in a private collections. The series probably functioned as a set of small “spalliere," paintings installed in the wainscoting of a palace bedchamber at shoulder height (“spalla” meaning “shoulder” in Italian). The story of Susanna was a popular in the Renaissance as model example of chastity and the application of good and fair judgment. For another set of larger spalliera panels depicting the story, see Walters 37.480, 37.485 and 37.490.Born and trained in the north Italian city of Ferrara, Lorenzo Costa moved to Bologna in 1483 where he worked for the powerful Bentivoglio family. In 1507 he moved to Mantua and was appointed as court painter to that city's ruling family, the Gonzaga. The Susanna series is probably among Costa's earlier works from the late 1480s. The sculptural, hard-edged style is close to his Bentivoglio altarpiece, dated 1488, in the church of San Giacomo Maggiore, Bologna. The careful, symmetrical structuring of the architecture conveys a sense of societal stability that is of course misleading in this story of corruption within the halls of justice. The purple-red (porphyry) roundel prominently placed on the dais is a traditional symbol indicating a site of power.
provenance
Private collection, Milan, prior to 1859 [mode of acquisition unknown]; Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1911 [mode of acquisition unknown]; Walters Art Musuem, 1931, by bequest.
date
ca. 1488-90 (Renaissance)
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Painting & Drawing
panel paintings
spalliere
imageCount
1
pageCount
1
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
44.1
height
43.8
depth
2.5
dimensionsRaw
Painted surface H excluding new strip added to the right side: 17 3/8 x W: 17 1/4 x D: 1 in. (44.1 x 43.8 x 2.5 cm)
Source extras
inscriptions
[Seal] On reverse: red wax seal with the double eagle of the Austrian export office of Milan; [Transcription] On reverse
below seal in black ink: verificato/#72 f...del Sante/78
med
tempera on wood panel
creator_ids
17194
collection_ids
REN
exhibition_ids
91
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
e55938940607be4f