Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Holy Family with a Curtain 1646 Oil on wood, 46,5 x 69 cm Staatliche Museen, Kassel The Holy Family and other representations of the childhood of Christ occur frequently in Rembrandt's art during the 1640s. Domestic happiness and intimacy are their dominate mood.
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
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]
Holy Family (La Sainte Famille), also called The Rest on the Flight into Egypt, is an oil on canvas painting by the French Rococo artist Antoine Watteau, now in the Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg.
The Madonna of humility by Domenico di Bartolo 1433 has been described as one of the most innovative devotional images from the early Renaissance [35]. Catholic Marian art has expressed a wide range of theological topics that relate to Mary, often in ways that are far from obvious, and whose meaning can only be recovered by detailed scholarly analysis.
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.
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.
A pen-drawing for the picture is in the collection of Leon Bonnat, Paris; reproduced by Lippmann-Hofstede de Groot, No. 20. A study in chalk for the Child in the cradle was in the collection of J. P. Heseltine , London, and is now in the collection of H. Oppenheim, London; reproduced by Lippmann, No. i883.