Skip to main content
The Walters Art Museum

Online Collection

Explore the Art Collection keyboard_arrow_down close
  • Explore By...
  • Category
  • Date
  • Medium
  • Creator
  • Places
  • Museum Locations
The Walters Art Museum walters-logo-white
  • Calendar
  • Art
  • Shop
  • Give Now
  • Visit
    • Plan Your Visit
    • Hours
    • Directions & Parking
    • Food, Drink, & Shop
    • Free Admission
    • Tours
    • Accessibility
    • Visitor Promise
  • Experience
    • Virtual Museum
    • Exhibitions & Installations
    • Programs & Events
    • Collections
    • Buildings
    • Baltimore
  • Support
    • Support the Walters
    • Corporate Partnerships
    • Institutional Funders
    • Evening at the Walters
    • Volunteers
  • About
    • Mission & Vision
    • Leadership
    • Strategic Plan
    • Land Acknowledgment
    • Research
    • Policies
Image for Madonna and Child with the Young St. John and Two Angels
tooltip-icon Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Zero

Download Image Zoom
Image for Madonna and Child with the Young St. John and Two Angels
tooltip-icon Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Zero

Download Image Zoom
  • arrow_forward_ios
  • arrow_forward_ios
Madonna and Child with the Young St. John and Two Angels Thumbnail
Madonna and Child with the Young St. John and Two Angels Thumbnail
Madonna and Child with the Young St. John and Two Angels Thumbnail
Madonna and Child with the Young St. John and Two Angels Thumbnail

Madonna and Child with the Young St. John and Two Angels

Formerly attributed to Raffaello Botticini (Italian, 1477-after 1520) (Painter)
ca. 1505 (Renaissance)
oil on wood panel
(Renaissance Europe )

“Tondi” (circular paintings) were a popular form of domestic decoration in Renaissance Florence, especially in bedrooms where they were hung high on a wall. In this example, the Madonna holds the Infant Christ on a pillow on her knee. The child affectionately holds onto his mother’s finger and solemnly gazes out of the picture, almost as if uninterested in the carnation—a symbol of the purity of love—offered to him by the angel at the right. The young John the Baptist, Christ’s cousin and patron saint of Florence, stands in prayer at the left along with another figure, probably another angel, looks on from behind.

In his 1976 catalogue of the Walters’ Italian paintings, Federico Zeri attributed the tondo to Raffaello Botticini, son and pupil of the more famous Francesco Botticini (1446-98). However it shows little similarity with Raffaello’s documented works as they are now known, such as the “Lamentation of the Dead Christ” (1508), destroyed in World War II and formerly at the Collegiate Museum in Empoli, near Florence, or the “Nativity with Saints Barbara and Martin” (1512) now at the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg. The painting can perhaps be better ascribed to an unknown artist working around the same time in the early 1500s.

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.

Don Marcello Massarenti Collection, Rome [date and mode of acquisition unknown] [1881 catalogue: no. 41, as Lorenzo di Credi; 1897 catalogue; no. 155, as school of Lorenzo di Credi]; Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1902, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.

Conservation

Date Description Narrative
9/14/1938 Treatment stabilized
9/1/1949 Treatment loss compensation
5/14/1970 Treatment loss compensation; coated
Share
  • social-item
  • social-item
  • social-item

Geographies

Italy, Florence (Place of Origin)

Measurements

Painted surface H: 21 x W: 20 13/16 x D excluding cradle: 3/8 in. (53.3 x 52.8 x 1 cm)

Credit Line

Acquired by Henry Walters with the Massarenti Collection, 1902

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.

37.1040

Do you have additional information?

Notify the curator

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

  • Visit
  • Experience
  • What's On
  • About
  • Shop
  • Support The Walters
copyright

The Walters Art Museum

  • Accessibility
  • Privacy Policy/Terms of Use
  • Copyright Info
  • facebook
  • instagram
  • twitter
modal close
Image for
tooltip-icon Creative Commons License

Tooltip description to define this term for visitors to the website.

zoom-btn zoom-btn preview-download
Image for
tooltip-icon Creative Commons License

Tooltip description to define this term for visitors to the website.

zoom-btn zoom-btn preview-download
  • arrow_forward_ios
  • arrow_forward_ios