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Other Frescoes

Other Frescoes

A study of St Simon and St Jude for the Last Supper

c.1853-1876

Albumen print | RCIN 854070

A photograph of a study for the figures of St Simon and St Jude in the fresco of the Last Supper, thought to have been executed by Perugino, painted on the walls of the refectory (now a museum) of the former Convent of Fuligno in Florence and traditionally dated c.1493-1496. This drawing in now in the Uffizi (inv. no. 1763E), where it is catalogued as by an anonymous artist from Umbria, copying Pietro Perugino.

The fresco – which also depicts the scene of the Agony in the Garden in the background – was discovered in the 19th century and initially attributed to Raphael, but now it is believed to be by Pietro Perugino. A number of scholars debated the involvement of the workshop in this fresco and the date it was executed. In a recent exhibition catalogue, Padovani attributed the fresco to Perugino, describing the involvement of the workshop as secondary and minimal and dating the decoration towards the end of the 1470s, before the frescoes executed by Perugino in the Sistine Chapel (c.1481-1482). See Bibliographic References.

Ruland (1876) notes that the fresco was "in the former Nunnery of S. Onofrio, now in the Egyptian Museum, Florence". In 1855, the rooms of the Convent were used to accommodate the Egyptian Museum, which was later moved to its current location in Palazzo della Crocetta.
  • Acquired for the Prince Consort's Raphael Collection (c.1853-1876)