Cargando

La Virgen con el Niño

Anonymous French Masterca. 1250-75

Museo Carmen Thyssen Málaga

Museo Carmen Thyssen Málaga
Málaga, España

The Virgin stands upright and frontally, on a small hexagonal base, holding the Christ Child on her left side. She wears a short veil on her head, held in place with a bejewelled crown, and she looks towards the Child. Around her shoulders is a long mantle which falls to the ground and is held in place with a strap at her neck, fastened by a bulbous agrafe. Underneath she is dressed in a belted gown. The Christ Child is supported by the Virgin´s left hand, while she holds his left foot with her right hand, and he reaches out with his right hand to touch the agrafe. He wears a long tunic. The Virgin's mantle and the Christ Child's tunic are blue with gilding and the Virgin's gown is red, although none of this visible paint is probably original (there are several layers of paint in places). The left hand of the Christ Child is broken off, but otherwise the group is in good condition. This monumental group of the Virgin and Child has its closest affinities with the great "trumeau" figures of the same subject on two of the most famous French cathedrals, Reims (west portal, centre doorway) and Amiens (the so-called "Vierge Dorée"). All three figures share the same stance, although the Carmen Thyssen-Bornemisza "Virgin and Child" is nearer to the Amiens figure with its heavy, crumpled drapery and rather stiff pose. The "Vierge Dorée", executed between 1259 and 1269, has been shown to derive from Parisian models of the mid-century, and may well have been carved by a Parisian workshop. The Carmen Thyssen-Bornemisza "Virgin and Child", showing a sweetly-smiling countenance and noble dignity, has also been influenced by the sculptures of the capital, but it shows obvious points of contact with sculpture of the Reims west portal, especially that of the so-called Joseph Master of about 1245–55. The original context of this "Virgin and Child" is not known, but there is the possibility that it stood as a "trumeau" figure, like the Virgins at Reims and Amiens. Notwithstanding our ignorance of its intended setting, the Sionviller "Virgin and Child" is a very rare example of a monumental sculpture from the period around the middle of the 13th century, the "High Gothic" era. Paul Williamson

Mostrar menosMás información
  • Título: La Virgen con el Niño
  • Creador: Anonymous French Master
  • Vida del creador: 1111/1111
  • Nacionalidad del creador: French
  • Lugar de nacimiento del creador: Île-de-France or Champagne
  • Lugar de fallecimiento del creador: Île-de-France or Champagne
  • Fecha: ca. 1250-75
  • Dimensiones físicas: 60 x 181 x d67 cm
  • Origen: Colección Carmen Thyssen-Bornemisza en préstamo gratuito al Museo Carmen Thyssen Málaga
  • Tipo: Escultura
  • Técnica artística: Piedra arenisca
Museo Carmen Thyssen Málaga

Descarga la aplicación

Explora museos y juega con Art Transfer, Pocket Gallery y Art Selfie, entre otras funciones

Página principal
Descubrir
Jugar
Cercano
Favoritos