The Virgin Immaculate with the Four Doctors of the Church, Study for the Dispute over the Immaculate Conception 1625–1713 Carlo Maratti Italian Together with a second drawing in the Museum’s collection (inv. ), the present sheet represents a composition study for the altarpiece commissioned from Maratti by Cardinal Alderano Cybo (1613-1700) for his private chapel in the church of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome. Completed and installed in 1686, the painting represents the Dispute of the Four Doctors of the Church (Saint John the Evangelist, Saint Gregory the Great, Saint Augustine, and Sain


The Virgin Immaculate with the Four Doctors of the Church, Study for the Dispute over the Immaculate Conception 1625–1713 Carlo Maratti Italian Together with a second drawing in the Museum’s collection (inv. ), the present sheet represents a composition study for the altarpiece commissioned from Maratti by Cardinal Alderano Cybo (1613-1700) for his private chapel in the church of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome. Completed and installed in 1686, the painting represents the Dispute of the Four Doctors of the Church (Saint John the Evangelist, Saint Gregory the Great, Saint Augustine, and Saint John Chrysostom) over the Immaculate Conception. Above the four saints appears the subject of their patristic discourse, the Immaculate Virgin Mary surrounded by a choir of angels, seated on a crescent moon, and crowned by a nimbus of stars. The present drawing records a preliminary idea for the whole composition - later modified - where the figure of the youthful John the Evangelist was intended to be standing on the far right. A copy drawn in 1705 by the obscure artist Giuseppe Maccagno, and pasted by the Italian eighteenth-century collector Sebastiano Resta onto his ‘Galleria Portatile’ (Codex Resta, Biblioteca Ambrosiana, Milan inv. 250 fol. 232), records a further lost drawing by Maratta with this earlier composition. As proven by the final painting, and by other drawings in the Metropolitan Museum (inv. ) and in the Museum Kunst Palast of Düsseldorf (inv. FP 1131), the artist drastically changed this first idea: the figure of Saint John was shifted to the left, gesturing toward the open book held by the seated Saint Gregory the Great, which was moved to the opposite side and studied in greater detail on several drawings now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (inv. ), Düsseldorf (inv. FP 540 and FP 13105), London (British Museum inv. 1927,), Madrid (Biblioteca Nacional inv. 7970), and in Venice (Fondazione Cini inv. 36137). According to the d


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Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
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