Vision of St Thomas Aquinas (Santi di Tito)

The Vision of St Thomas Aquinas, also known as the Mystical Vision or Ectasy of St Thomas Aquinas is an altarpiece, painted by the Florentine painter Santi di Tito in 1593 for the church of San Marco in Florence, Italy.

The painting was commissioned by Sebastiano Pandolfini del Turco for his family chapel in San Marco. The painting records a version of a miraculous event putatively experienced by St Thomas Aquinas near the end of his life. In 1273 had been writing on the topic of the eucharist, when at the Dominican convent of Naples in the chapel of Saint Nicholas, Thomas lingered before a crucifix. A witness, the sacristan Domenic of Caserta putatively overheard the crucfied Christ on the crucifix speak to Thomas and say "You have written well of me, Thomas. What reward would you have for your labor?" Thomas in turn responded, "Nothing but you, Lord."

The painting converts the experience into a larger colloquy with various saints, and the crucifix becoming the Christ in person crucified. The scene seems to depict the figures emerging from an altarpiece depicting the crucifixion with St Catherine of Alexandria with the wheel, and the Virgin Mary standing, Mary Magdalene hugging the feet of Christ, and St John the Apostle. Thomas kneels forward and proffers his open book, while in the background witnesses confer.

The painting, completed towards the end of Santi di Tito's career, has been described by Freedberg as a prime example of "Counter-Maniera" in Florence, rebelling against stylized fancy with a burgeoning realism. This painting, in a proto-baroque fashion, stresses a diagonal spatial composition, rising from the kneeling Thomas to the crucified Christ. Freedberg states the painter has made an image that admits no boundary between the spectators reality and that which the painting, with nearly Trompe l'oeil effect, pretends, and within the paintind, there is no line between the real and the visionary. The spilling of the divine, which emerges from a dark background, into what is the realistic mundane world, would be a theme common to Roman altarpieces by Caravaggio within the next decade.