This commanding mid-17th-century Spanish Baroque painting depicts Saint Elijah wrapped in a coarse Carmelite habit and raising a flaming sword.
Towering within the vertical composition, his gaunt face carved by conviction, he holds his burning brand aloft - its red blaze cutting sharply through the heavy storm clouds behind him. In his left hand - a scroll bearing his declaration of zeal. Here's a man who has staked everything on belief.
The atmosphere is charged. The sky roils in leaden greys and bruised blues. At his feet, a fire burns, as a smouldering reminder of the prophet’s confrontation with the priests of Baal. In the background, almost swallowed by smoke and shadow, a bull lies engulfed - the sacrificial contest that defined his story.
Yet what arrests the viewer is not spectacle, but intensity. Elijah’s gaze is stern, inward, and burdened. This is not a man celebrating victory - it is a man carrying responsibility.
The Spanish Baroque understood something essential: faith was not mild. In the decades following the Counter-Reformation, images like this were meant to galvanise. Elijah becomes an embodiment of conviction under pressure - a figure who stands against compromise. His raised arm divides heaven and earth; his body anchors the storm.
Stylistically, the painting aligns with the Madrid school of the mid-17th century. The dense chiaroscuro, restrained earthen palette, and sculptural presence of the figure recall the devotional gravity of Francisco de Zurbarán, while the atmospheric turbulence echoes the influence of Antonio de Pereda. As with many Spanish compositions of the period, the ultimate source may trace back to a Flemish engraving - translated into the darker emotional register favoured in Madrid.
But beyond attribution and influence, this is a painting about what happens when belief becomes action.
Held in a modern gilt frame with a continuous scrolling foliate frieze running along the sight edge.
Medium: Oil on canvas
Overall size: 37½” x 47½” / 95cm x 121cm
Year of creation: c. 1650
Provenance: Private collection, Spain.
Condition: Cleaned. Revarnished. Canvas relined. Later stretcher. Craquelure throughout. The paint layer is stable. Frame in excellent condition.
Our reference: BRV2222