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Madonna and Child with Saint John

Madonna and Child with Saint John

Artist: Francesco Pesellino (Italian, 1422-1457)
Date: about 1455
Dimensions:
H: 28 1/2 in. (72.4 cm); W: 21 1/4 in. (54 cm)
Medium: Tempera on wood panel
Classification: Paintings
Credit Line: Purchased with funds from the Libbey Endowment, Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey
Object number: 1944.34
Label Text:Because of the abundant gold, the cost of this panel would have been considerable. It was likely displayed in a home as a precious object and an aid to personal devotion. A gold background symbolized the light of Heaven, so was common for devotional images. Hammered to paper thinness, gold leaf was adhered to the panel with reddish clay (bole), then “punched” and burnished with tools to create designs, such as the rays of the halos and the flowered pattern of the curtains. Pesellino used powdered gold (even more expensive than gold leaf) to paint the detail on Mary’s cloak.

Despite the angels and the otherworldly setting, Pesellino’s graceful, young Madonna and chubby, curly-haired infant Jesus—along with Jesus’ youthful cousin John the Baptist, patron saint of Florence—seem more approachable and appealingly human than some earlier Virgin and Child images.

On view
In Collection(s)