Skip to main content

Luca Giordano, Saint Anthony of Padua restores the Foot of a Man

Key facts
Full title Saint Anthony of Padua miraculously restores the Foot of a Self-Mutilated Man
Artist Luca Giordano
Artist dates 1634 - 1705
Date made before 1700
Medium and support Oil on canvas
Dimensions 105.5 × 80.3 cm
Acquisition credit Presented by C.W. Dopson, 1901
Inventory number NG1844
Location Not on display
Collection Main Collection
Saint Anthony of Padua restores the Foot of a Man
Luca Giordano
/

This is a preparatory sketch for one of a series of eight frescoes that Giordano painted on the walls just below the dome of the church of San Antonio de los Alemanes in Madrid. The frescoes depict miracles performed by Saint Anthony, and this sketch represents one of the stranger episodes in his life. When a young man named Leonardo confessed to Anthony that he had kicked his mother, the saint replied that the foot deserved to be cut off. When Leonardo did exactly that, Saint Anthony miraculously reattached it.

Here, Saint Anthony stands on the steps in his monk’s habit, holding the newly restored limb of the swooning Leonardo. Like the other seven episodes in the series, Giordano designed this fresco to look like a tapestry held up by the two angels at the upper corners – they seem to be unfurling the picture so as to reveal the miracle to the congregation in the church below.

Download image
Download low-resolution image

Download a low-resolution copy of this image for personal use.

License this image

License and download a high-resolution image for reproductions up to A3 size from the National Gallery Picture Library.

License image
Download low-resolution image

This image is licensed for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons agreement.

Examples of non-commercial use are:

  • Research, private study, or for internal circulation within an educational organisation (such as a school, college or university)
  • Non-profit publications, personal websites, blogs, and social media

The image file is 800 pixels on the longest side.

As a charity, we depend upon the generosity of individuals to ensure the collection continues to engage and inspire. Help keep us free by making a donation today.

Download low-resolution image

You must agree to the Creative Commons terms and conditions to download this image.

Creative Commons Logo