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Lot n° 5

Pere Serra (doc. 1357 - 1405)

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Pere Serra (doc. 1357 - 1405) "The Healing of Aeneas" Panel painting. Barcelona. Circa 1390 - 1395. 107.2 x 88.4cm. From the Main Altarpiece of the Church of Sant Pere de Cubells, Lleida. According to the report written by Dr. Alberto Velasco Gonzàlez, "the panel was part of one of the most important altarpieces painted in the western part of Catalonia around 1400. I refer to the group that presided over the main altar of the church of Sant Pere in the town of Cubells (Lleida), until around 1765-1769 when it was replaced by a baroque altarpiece more in keeping with eighteenth-century fashions." "The panel represents a miracle related to the hagiographic legend of Saint Peter, the Healing of Aeneas, and is one of the compartments of the scattered main altarpiece of the church of Sant Pere de Cubells (Lleida). Some of the compartments of the ancient Gothic altarpiece must have been hidden in corners in the church, while others were reused in the construction of a chest of drawers for the sacristy. The main altarpiece of Sant Pere de Cubells has recently been the object of interest of Francesc Ruiz, who has reconstructed the story of what happened to it and has proposed a hypothetical reconstruction of it based on the known compartments. As we have already pointed out, some panels should not have been integrated into the altarpiece, such as the Resurrection of Tabitha, which was already in the Roberto Schiff collection in Rome at the beginning of the 20th century. Apparently, it was during the twenties that Jaume Camps discovered the panels. From that time they entered the market through the antique dealer Josep Bardolet (1891-1982). Several changes of hands led to the dispersal of the set, which today has been distributed among different museums and collections: the Nativity and the Resurrection of Christ, which were part of the predella, are in the Maricel Museum in Sitges; the Preaching of Saint Peter and the Fall of Simon Magus are in the Museum of Fine Arts of Bilbao; and, finally, the Crucifixion of Peter and a second part of the predella with the Ascension, the Pentecost and the Coronation of the Virgin are in the Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya. The rest of the panels are in various private collections. The Healing of Aeneas does not appear mentioned by the sources that tell us about the sale and dispersal of the set, although we do not know the cause of this non-appearance. The first mention of the panel in historiography is found in the monograph on Cubells that Jaume Camps, the discoverer of the compartments, published in 1972. Years later, Josep Gudiol and Santiago Alcolea included it among the known compartments of the set, identifying the scene as a "Miracle of Saint Peter", noting that it had been cut and that its fragments were found in different private collections in Barcelona. In reality, this is not the case, since the fragment here is the only one known from aforementioned scene. In 1995 Ana Galilea Antón again alluded to the compartment in her study of the two panels kept in Bilbao, going so far as to reproduce it graphically and identifying the scene with a healing of the sick. Favà once again alluded to the panel, noting that we owe it to Camps for its first publication, and it was, finally, Francesc Ruiz who correctly identified the episode depicted with the Healing of Aeneas in his monographic study on the altarpiece published in 2015. The saint is the main protagonist of the episode, and hence the centre of the composition. He has been depicted full-length, barefoot, wearing a bluish tunic and a cloak which is red on the outside and green on the inside. He has a golden nimbus decorated with punched motifs based on dots and holds a book in his left hand, while with his right he makes the gesture that causes the miracle to happen. Next to Peter is a second figure with a halo, wearing an orange tunic and a blue and red cloak, who could represent Saint Paul, the habitual companion of the prince of the apostles. Attached is a certificate from Dr. Alberto Velasco González The painting has a current and valid exportation license awarded by the Spanish Ministry of Culture. The panel has gone through important restorations at various points in history. Provenance: - Barcelona, ​​Josep Bardolet (circa 1920-1929) - Barcelona, ​​Josep Costa (?) - Barcelona, ​​Josep Valenciano (?) - Barcelona, ​​Fages de Climent collection (1938) - Barcelona, ​​Gunther Hartmann collection - Barcelona, ​​private collection (2021)