The paintings may have belonged to the Adornes family of Bruges. They may also have commissioned the two St Francis paintings as commemoration of the pilgrimage, in the fashion of the Eyckian The Three Marys at the Tomb. An alternative theory is that they had the small painting prepared as a portable devotional work to bring on pilgrimage.
About Saint Francis Receiving the Stigmata (van Eyck) in brief

It was later sold to a dealer in Philadelphia for £700 in 1917, and later the collector John G. Johnson bought it for £7,000. The painting is now in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, where it is on display alongside other works of art by Van Eyck, including The Temptation of the Sun and The Sorrows of the Moon. It is also on display at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. and is on loan to the Library of Congress, which has a special collection of vanEyck’s works on loan from the University of Maryland, College of Arts and Sciences. It can be ordered online at www.museumoffinearts.org.uk/st Francis-receiving-the-stigmata-paintings-by-jan-van-eyck-and-other-artists-on- loan-to-the museum-of-museum of the city-city of- Philadelphia. For more information on the exhibition, visit the museum’s website or go to: http://www.museums-art.org/st-fansi/fansis-recovery-st-francis.html. For information on how to buy the painting in the US, visit: www. museumofart.com/s/stfancis- Receiving-The-Stigmata/purchase-purchase.php. For details on the Italian version of the painting, go to www.s/m/sf/fantsi/receipts/recovers/StFrancis-Receiving the-St Francis.
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