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Notes
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Saint Mark, one of the four authors of the Gospels, stands on a tilted floor next to Saint Augustine, a fourth-century theologian. A winged lion, the traditional symbol of Saint Mark, can be seen resting at the feet of the saint. Saint Augustine’s richly decorated mitre, crosier and gloves identify him as Bishop of Hippo, his home town (the modern city of Annaba, in Algeria). This panel is a fragment of the same altarpiece to which another work in the National Gallery’s collection, Saint John the Baptist and Saint John the Evangelist, belongs. A lost or unidentified central panel is likely to have shown the Virgin Mary and Christ Child and, if that is the case, the tilted floor probably continued seamlessly across all the panels. But it’s also possible that a sculpture formed the centre of this ensemble.
Title
Saint Mark and Saint Augustine
Date
probably about 1470
Medium
Tempera on wood
Measurements
H 129.5 x W 52.1 cm
Accession number
NG588
Acquisition method
Bought, 1857
Work type
Painting