Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The mystical marriage of Saint Catherine covers two different subjects often shown in Catholic art arising from visions received by either Catherine of Alexandria or Catherine of Siena (1347–1380), in which these virgin saints went through a mystical marriage wedding ceremony with Christ, in the presence of the Virgin Mary, consecrating ...
The painting shows the virgin Mary holding the Christ child on her knees while the child celebrates the symbolic mystical marriage of Saint Catherine of Alexandria by offering her a ring. St. St. Catherine, kneeling before the Christ child, wears a wide fur-lined rose cloak and gilt crown; her long, blond hair is an attribute of aristocratic ...
It shows the Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine, a subject repeatedly returned to by the artist, such as in a c.1547–1550 work by the artist. It is one of the most successful variants on Titian 's 1519–1526 Pesaro Altarpiece for Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari , also in Venice, using the same asymmetric diagonal composition with the Madonna ...
The Mystic Marriage of St Catherine (c. 1585) The Mystic Marriage of St Catherine is a c.1585 oil on canvas painting by Annibale Carracci, now in the Gallerie Nazionali di Capodimonte in Naples, Italy. [1] The composition and sfumato effect owe much to Corregio, particularly the latter's painting of the same subject now in the Louvre. [2]
Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine is an oil painting on canvas of c. 1547–1550 by the Italian Renaissance painter Paolo Veronese. It was in the Liechtenstein Collection by 1767 [ 1 ] and was acquired in 1926 by Catherine Barker Spaulding Hickox, who in 1970 bequeathed it to its present owner, the Barker Welfare Foundation.
Mystic Marriage of St. Catherine (Memling) Mystical Marriage of Saint Catherine (Michelino da Besozzo) Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine (Moretto) Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine (Moroni) Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine (Veronese, c. 1547–1550)
The composition of eight figures, representing the Virgin Mary, clothed in red vest and a blue mantle, seated on the viewer's left, bending and holding the Christ child on her knee, while he places a ring on the finger of Saint Catherine: behind is an angel bearing a sword, the instrument of her martyrdom; and on the right are two other angels witnessing the mystical union of Jesus and the Saint.
Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine is an unfinished c.1529 oil on panel painting of the mystical marriage of Saint Catherine by Parmigianino. It dates to the painter's time in Bologna or a few years earlier during his stay in Rome.