Jan Gossart. Virgin and Child. 1515–1525. Netherlands. Oil on panel The first Netherlandish painter known to have studied classical sculpture in Rome, Jan Gossart achieved a sophisticated fusion of Renaissance vocabulary and traditional Netherlandish style and form. In this painting, the Virgin’s classicizing draperies and the child’s athletic figure show Gossart’s command of the new Renaissance style. The Virgin presents the Child so that his glance and blessing gesture are directed beyond the picture to the right. This suggests that the panel was once paired with another depicting a donor in


Jan Gossart. Virgin and Child. 1515–1525. Netherlands. Oil on panel The first Netherlandish painter known to have studied classical sculpture in Rome, Jan Gossart achieved a sophisticated fusion of Renaissance vocabulary and traditional Netherlandish style and form. In this painting, the Virgin’s classicizing draperies and the child’s athletic figure show Gossart’s command of the new Renaissance style. The Virgin presents the Child so that his glance and blessing gesture are directed beyond the picture to the right. This suggests that the panel was once paired with another depicting a donor in prayer, with which it would have formed a portable folding altarpiece. Earlier Netherlandish painters had favored this format of paired, hinged panels, now called a diptych.


Size: 2252px × 3000px
Photo credit: © WBC ART / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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