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Holy Family (Watteau) The Holy Family with Saint John the Baptist and an Angel; Holy Family under an Oak Tree; The Holy Family with a Little Bird; Holy Family with a Shepherd; Holy Family with Angels (Parmigianino) Holy Family with Saint Anne and the Infant Saint John; Holy Family with Saint Catherine and Saint John the Baptist
The Holy Family is a 1518 painting of the Holy Family (Jesus, Mary and Joseph), Saint Elisabeth, an infant John the Baptist and two angels. [1] It is signed by Raphael, but most of the work was delegated to his workshop assistants. [2] It was commissioned by Pope Leo X as a gift to Claude, wife of Francis I of France, hence its name.
Holy Family: 1650–c. 1651: 97,8 × 129,5 cm: Acquired in 1942. Cambridge (Massachusetts), Fogg Art Museum: 195/54 The Holy Family with Saint John and Saint Elisabeth in a landscape: c. 1650: 94 x 122 cm: Painted for the wife of Nicolas Fouquet and joined the French royal collection in 1685: Paris, musée du Louvre: 196/55 Moses saved from the ...
The Holy Family With a Palm Tree [Wikidata] Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh, United Kingdom: Oil and gold on canvas transferred from panel diameter 101,5 c. 1506: Self-portrait: Palazzo Pitti, Florence, Italy: Tempera on panel 47,5 x 33 c. 1506: Saint George and the Dragon: National Gallery of Art, Washington, United States: Oil on panel ...
Christ in the House of His Parents (1849–50) is a painting by John Everett Millais depicting the Holy Family in Saint Joseph's carpentry workshop. The painting was extremely controversial when first exhibited, prompting many negative reviews, most notably one written by Charles Dickens.
The Holy Family with Saint Anne and the Infant Saint John and the Holy Family with Saint Elizabeth and the Infant Saint John the Baptist are titles given to two very similar pictures of the Holy Family by the Italian Renaissance painter Bronzino. The first version (German: Hl. Familie mit Hl.
Holy Family. Holy Family with Saints Elizabeth and John the Baptist is a fragment of fresco from the Basilica of Sant'Andrea, Mantua, now held in Mantua's Diocesan Museum.It was painted ca. 1509–1511 by the Italian Renaissance painter Correggio and is 1.5m in diameter. [1]
The Holy Family and the Family of Saint John the Baptist is a casein tempera on canvas painting with gilding, measuring 40 by 169 cm and dating to around 1504-1506. It was painted by Andrea Mantegna and was mentioned by his second son Francesco as still being in Andrea's studio on his death in 1506.