4.6Museu de Setúbal/Convento de Jesus
Convent • Setúbal, Setúbal
In the heart of Setúbal, the Convent of Jesus reveals a decisive moment in Portuguese art. Founded in 1490 by Justa Rodrigues Pereira and enlarged under the patronage of King John II, it was entrusted to Diogo Boitaca, who carried out his first work in Portugal here. The church is seen as a landmark in the beginnings of the Manueline style: its three vaulted aisles at the same height create a rare, bright and continuous space, supported by twisted columns that stay in the memory. Over the centuries, the complex changed its life: a convent for Poor Clare nuns, later a hospital, and since 1961 the city museum. Today, moving between the cloister, the Chapter House, the Upper Choir and the Gallery of 16th-century Art, one senses how the building preserves very different layers of time. Among them, the fourteen panels of the former altarpiece, attributed to Jorge Afonso’s workshop, stand out as a treasure linking Setúbal to the great cycle of Portuguese Renaissance painting.




