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Bartolomé Esteban Murillo
Sevilla, 1617-1682
c. 1650-1655
Oil on canvas, 148 x 104 cm
Deposited by the Provincial Council of Bizkaia, after dation by BBVA in 2000
This pathetic image of St Peter repented of his denial of Christ, according to the story in the Gospels, was attributed to Ribera on account of its naturalism and the tenebrist lighting that makes the figure stand out against a dark uniform background. Nonetheless, it has been unanimously recognised as the work of the Sevillian painter Murillo, dated relatively early in his production, around the years 1650-1655, when Ribera exerted a strong but mellow influence over the former. The disposition of the figure creates the effect of a slightly downward diagonal from right to left, and the ashlar on which the book and the keys are placed relate the work to other compositions such as Ribera’s Saint Jerome in The Cleveland Museum of Art, of roughly the same period. The face, expressing restrained pathos, expresses grief and hope very well, while the materials, with rounded pleats, are characteristic of the time the work was probably painted. Twenty years later Murillo tackled the same theme again in a canvas for the Hospital of the Venerables in Seville, today kept in the Townsend Collection in Newick. This version was similarly inspired in Ribera but painted in the artist’s more diaphanous style of 1678, year in which the work has been dated after Ponz and Ceán Bermúdez, who apparently had access to documentation on the subject. This is a significant work among those produced in the mid-seventeenth century, when Murillo was gradually moving away from Tenebrism towards greater expressive freedom. While the composition is indebted to the standing figures of saints painted by Zurbarán, Murillo’s sensitivity has little in common with the austerity of the Estremaduran artist and his pictures of saints, with their delicate and free-flowing technique, are the very expression of holiness. [A.E.P.S.]
The cinematheque of the museum will be one of the venues of the 52nd Edition of the ZINEBI, International Festival of Documentary and Short Film of Bilbao., which takes place from the 22nd to the 27th of November.
Films from the retrospectives "The Gaze of Michelangelo" and "Cold War for Love" will be shown in the Auditorium of the Museum.
Further information at:
www.zinebi.com
Sponsored by ÁREA DE CULTURA Y EDUCACIóN

Proyection from 11|22|10 to 11|27|10
Proyection timeline for this week:
The Cinemateque has a fixed programme that is projected in the Museum auditorium twice daily on Fridays and Saturdays.
Entrance is not permitted to the Auditorium once the projection has begun.
For additional information download the programme.

12|03|10 • 12|18|10
TATI (Jacques Tatischeff), actor y realizador francés (Le Pecq. 1907-París, 1982). Sus antepasados so... 
11|22|10 • 11|27|10
The cinematheque of the museum will be one of the venues of the 52nd Edition of the ZINEBI, International Festival of Documentary an... 
10|08|10 • 11|20|10
Francisco Regueiro (Valladolid, 1934)
Diez películas en treinta años y casi los veinte últimos sin dirigir, son datos lo sufi... 
08|13|10 • 10|01|10
Films by Jørgen Leth stand out for their formal simplicity and lack of narrative. In his revindication of the naive appearance of Br... 
05|28|10 • 08|07|10
En su primer largo Los 400 golpes relata su autobiografía, la vida de un niño desamparado en el personaje de Antoine Doinel... 