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Madonna and Child Thumbnail
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Madonna and Child

Bartolomeo Montagna (Italian, ca. 1450-1523) (Painter)
1480-1485 (Renaissance)
oil on wood panel
(Renaissance Europe )

Images of the Madonna and Child were common in the homes of Renaissance Italy, where they were focus of daily prayer and devotion and served as moral exemplars for young mothers and children. In this example, Christ and Mary’s divinity is downplayed; their halos are just barely visible and they appear quite simply as mother and son, sharing an intimate and almost playful exchange as the Christ Child holds onto his mother’s hand and reaches for her face. The Madonna has propped the child up on a stone table (perhaps intended to recall an altar) and before an expansive landscape of rocky cliffs, rolling hills, and a distant castle. The terrain is not too different from what the artist, Bartolomeo Montagna, would have seen around his native Vicenza, just east of Venice. Montagna was Vicenza's principal painter in the late 1400s and early 1500s, and a landscape such as this might have resonated with his local patrons.

Provenance
Provenance (from the French provenir, 'to come from/forth') is the chronology of the ownership, custody, or location of a historical object. Learn more about provenance at the Walters.

Private collection, Rome, until 1874 [mode of acquisition unknown]; M. Paul Delaroff, St. Petersburg, prior to 1909 [mode of acquisition unknown]; Sale, Galerie Georges Petit, Paris, April 23-24, 1914, lot 235 [as Antonio Vivarini]; Sekian, Paris, 1914-1916 [mode of acquisition unknown]; Paolo Paolini, Paris [date and mode of acquisition unknown]; Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1916, by purchase [through Bernard Berenson]; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.

Conservation

Date Description Narrative
5/29/1991 Examination examined for condition
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Geographies

Italy, Vicenza (Place of Origin)

Measurements

Painted surface H excluding added strips: 24 13/16 x W: 20 5/16 x D: 13/16 in. (63 x 51.6 x 2.1 cm); W of added strips on all four sides of panel: 3/16 in. (0.5 cm)

Credit Line

Acquired by Henry Walters, 1916

Location in Museum

Not on view

Accession Number

In libraries, galleries, museums, and archives, an accession number is a unique identifier assigned to each object in the collection.

37.1036

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Hours

  • Wednesday—Sunday: 10 a.m.—5 p.m.
  • Thursday: 1–8 p.m.
  • Monday—Tuesday: Closed

Location

600 N. Charles St.
Baltimore, MD
21201

Phone

410-547-9000

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