
Getty Museum
Elijah Receiving Bread from the Widow of Zarephath
Creator
Giovanni LanfrancoItalian Artist · 1582–1647
All works by this person →Giovanni Lanfranco was an early exponent of the Baroque style in Rome. In Parma, Lanfranco studied under Agostino Carracci and was influenced by Correggio's dome frescoes. In 1617 Lanfranco's frescoes in the Sala Regia in the papal Palazzo del Quirinale won him admiration as one of Rome's most progressive painters. In the mid-1620s he introduced an approach to space dominated by diagonals that der
More on Getty ULAN- Date
- 1621–1624
- Medium
- Oil on canvas
- Culture
- Italian
- Department
- Paintings
- Institution
- Getty Museum
In Giovanni Lanfranco's highly original design, a few large figures stand in a shallow foreground space. Using a low viewpoint and dramatic foreshortening, Lanfranco depicted the figures as if seen from below, imbuing them with monumentality. The powerful composition communicated both to spectators standing far away and to viewers standing beneath the painting. In this Old Testament story (1 Kings 17:8-24), the poor widow of Zarephath nourished Elijah in the desert with bread baked from a supply of grain that Elijah had assured her would be miraculously renewed by God. In Catholic theology, the widow's bread prefigured both the bread served at the Last Supper and God's sustenance of each Christian's spirit through the sacrament of the Eucharist. Appropriately, this picture and [*Moses and the Messengers from Canaan*](http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/objects/528/giovanni-lanfranco-moses-and-the-messengers-from-canaan-italian-1621-1624/) flanked a painting of the Last Supper in the large Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament in the church of San Paolo fuori le Mura (Saint Paul Outside the Walls) in Rome. Six additional paintings by Lanfranco, all related to the Eucharist, also hung high on the walls of the chapel.
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