Oil On Canvas
XVIII Century
By: Ubaldo Ricci (1669 - 1731) He was an Italian Painter, of the Late - Baroque Period.
He was born in Fermo and trained in Rome, he was a pupil of Carlo Maratta.
Description:
In this painting we see St. Gregory The Great enthroned,
Behind him there is a church and a church in the middle of the hills, a typical landscape of the Marche Region. Above him there are flying angels and some clouds broken by the divine light.
St Gregory is called The Great, because of his writing, his reform, his liturgy, the liturgiacal music, he was the great, he was a great leader, his leadership was fundamental to manage the church during difficult periods.
St. Peter the Deacon, reportedly saw a dove alight on the saint while he was composing his homily on the Ezechiel 1:25, "a voice came from above the firmament." Whenever the dove would start whispering in the saint's ear, he would commence dictating to Peter, and when the dove stopped the dictation also stopped. The homily itself identified the voice in Ezechiel with the Holy Spirit that descended on Jesus at his baptism. On the strength of this story, the dove became a common attribute of St. Gregory, as in the first picture at right, though usually it is the saint himself who is doing the writing.
(Christian Iconography)
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