Gallery 351, European Art 1500-1850, third floor
Main Building
Gallery 351, European Art 1500-1850, third floor
Main Building
This relief sculpture is a masterpiece of marble carving and a reflection of the inventive exploration of sculptural techniques that is synonymous with artists working in Florence in the 1400s. One of the innovations developed by the great sculptor Donatello (1386–1466) in the 1420s was rilievo schiacciato (flattened relief), a form of carving that employs line and moderate variations of surface depth to achieve refined effects. In this relief, Desiderio da Settignano transforms a familiar Renaissance religious subject of the Virgin with the infant Jesus into an image of atmospheric, unearthly delicacy.
The engaging expressions of the Virgin and Child offer a tender intimacy in an otherwise ethereal scene. Acquired as part of the important collection of the French antiquarian Edmond Foulc, this remarkable masterpiece was realized through a near-miraculous manipulation of the marble’s shallow surface.
Gallery 351, European Art 1500-1850, third floor
Title: | The Virgin and Child |
Date: | c. 1455-1460 |
Artist: | Desiderio da Settignano (Italian (active Florence), 1429/32–1464) |
Medium: | Marble |
Dimensions: | 23 1/4 × 16 3/4 × 2 5/8 inches (59.1 × 42.5 × 6.7 cm) |
Classification: | Sculpture |
Credit Line: | Purchased with the W. P. Wilstach Fund from the Edmond Foulc Collection, 1930 |
Accession Number: | W1930-1-73 |
Geography: | Made in Florence, Italy, Europe |
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Gallery 351, European Art 1500-1850, third floor
Main Building