The Alba Madonna by Raphael

The Alba Madonna by Raphael The Alba Madonna by Raphael depicts three figures all looking at the cross; they represent the Madonna with the ...
Provenance
Raphael
The Alba Madonna
Raphael
The Alba Madonna
Alba Madonna
Raphael, Alba Madonna

Raphael - The Alba Madonna - Google Art Project

“The Alba Madonna” by Raphael depicts three figures all looking at the cross; they represent the Madonna with the Christ Child and Saint John the Baptist as a child. The figures are grouped to the left in the round composition.

The outstretched arm of the Madonna and the resting elbow on the stump with her enveloping cloak balance the group image.

The painting is full of symbolism with Madonna shown wearing a blue mantle, set against a red dress, and with her right leg lying along a diagonal.

The blue symbolizes the church and the red Christ’s death, with the Madonna uniting the Church with Christ’s sacrifice. In her lap, she holds Christ as he stretches out to touch the cross carried by John.

Raphael painted this painting while he was in Florence and showed a landscape backdrop that places the scene in a Tuscan setting.

Saint John the Baptist was the patron of Florence, making his presence here in a Florentine environment, which was symbolic and relevant to his audience.

Raphaël - Étude Madone d'Albe 1

Raphael’s study of what became the Alba Madonna, with other sketches

The painting is the first of a series of full-length figure compositions that portray the apocryphal encounter between the Child Jesus and the boy Baptist.

In Christian traditions, the boy Baptist is supposed to have recognized Christ as the Redeemer even in their childhood, Raphael makes this clear by letting Christ take the cross from John.

Leonardo’s influence on Raphael is evident in this composition by the arrangement of the figures into a pyramidal composition.

This pyramidal composition is something that Raphael would have studied in Leonardo’s famous drawing of “The Virgin and Child with St. Anne”, which was in another church in Florence, where Raphael studied for four years.

Provenance

In the 18th century, the painting belonged to the Spanish House of Alba, whose name it bears. In 1836 it was acquired by Czar Nicholas I of Russia (1796-1855), who made it one of the highlights of the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg.

After the Russian Revolution, the Soviet Government sold it in 1931 to an American industrialist, who later donated his collection to the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., where it may be seen today.

Raphael

Raphael was an Italian painter and architect of the High Renaissance. His work is admired for its clarity of form, ease of composition, and together with Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci, he is one of the great masters of that period. 

Raphael was enormously productive, despite his death at 37, leaving a large body of work. Many of his works are in the Vatican Palace, where the frescoed Raphael Rooms were the central, and the largest, work of his career.

His best-known work is The School of Athens in the Vatican.

His career started in Umbria, then for four years he spent time in Florence absorbing the artistic renaissance of Florence and then his last twelve years in Rome, he worked for two Popes and their associates.

The Alba Madonna

  • Title:                The Alba Madonna
  • Artist:              Raphael
  • Created:          1510
  • Medium:         Oil on a panel mounted on canvas
  • Periods:           High Renaissance
  • Dimensions:   94.5 cm diameter ( 37 1⁄4 in)
  • Museum:         National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

Raphael

  • Name:            Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino
  • Born:              1483 – Urbino, Marche, Italy
  • Died:              1520 (aged 37) –  Rome, Italy
  • Movement:   High Renaissance
  • Notable Works:
    • Madonna in the Meadow
    • The Alba Madonna
    • The School of Athens
    • Small Cowper Madonna
    • The Madonna of the Pinks
    • Christ Falling on the Way to Calvary
    • The Marriage of the Virgin
    • Portrait of Baldassare Castiglione
    • St Paul Preaching
    • Madonna and Child by Raphael
      • The Niccolini-Cowper Madonna
      • Madonna and Child with the Book
      • Solly Madonna
      • Colonna Madonna
      • Conestabile Madonna
      • Madonna del Granduca
    • The Expulsion of Heliodorus from the Temple
    • Triumph of Galatea

The Alba Madonna

A Virtual Tour of the National Gallery of Art

  • “Ginevra de’ Benci” by Leonardo da Vinci
  • “A Young Girl Reading” by Jean-Honoré Fragonard
  • “Small Cowper Madonna” by Raphael
  • “The Alba Madonna” by Raphael
  • “Nude on a Divan” by Amedeo Modigliani
  • “Nude on a Blue Cushion” by Amedeo Modigliani
  • “Saint Jerome” by El Greco
  • “The Houses of Parliament, Sunset” by Claude Monet (National Gallery of Art, DC)
  • “Breezing Up (A Fair Wind)” by Winslow Homer
  • “Madame Moitessier” by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
  • Adrienne (Woman with Bangs) by Amedeo Modigliani
  • “Watson and the Shark” by John Singleton Copley
  • “The Emperor Napoleon in His Study at the Tuileries” by Jacques-Louis David
  • “The Boating Party” by Mary Cassatt
  • “Interior of the Pantheon, Rome” by Giovanni Paolo Panini
  • Marcelle Lender Dancing the Bolero in “Chilpéric” by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
  • “Quadrille at the Moulin Rouge” by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
  • “A Dutch Courtyard” by Pieter de Hooch
  • “The Mother and Sister of the Artist” by Berthe Morisot
  • “New York” by George Bellows
  • Self-Portrait by John Singleton Copley
  • “Self-Portrait” by Benjamin West
  • “Symphony in White, No. 1″ by James Abbott McNeill Whistler
  • A Prince of Saxony by Lucas Cranach the Elder
  • A Princess of Saxony by Lucas Cranach the Elder
  • “Skiffs on the Yerres” by Gustave Caillebotte
  • “The Niccolini-Cowper Madonna” by Raphael
  • “The Equatorial Jungle” by Henri Rousseau
  • Masterpieces of the National Gallery of Art
  • “Venus and Adonis” by Titian
  • “Waterloo Bridge” by Claude Monet
  • “Christ at the Sea of Galilee” by Circle of Tintoretto
  • “Both Members of This Club” by George Bellows
  • “Club Night” by George Bellows
  • “Farmhouse in Provence” by Vincent van Gogh
  • “Girl in White” by Vincent van Gogh
  • “Street in Venice” by John Singer Sargent
  • “Woman with a Parasol – Madame Monet and Her Son” by Claude Monet

Alba Madonna

Raphael, Alba Madonna

~~~

“If I create from the heart, nearly everything works: if from the head, almost nothing.” 
– Marc Chagall

~~~

Photo Credit 1) Raphael [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

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19 April 2020, 07:46 | Views: 7116

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