From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adoration of the Child
Artist Gerard van Honthorst  Edit this on Wikidata
Year1619–1621
Medium oil paint, canvas
Dimensions95.5 cm (37.6 in) × 131 cm (52 in)
Location Uffizi
Identifiers RKDimages ID: 240573

Adoration of the Christ Child (Italian: Adorazione del Bambino), is a c. 1619–1621 oil on canvas painting of the Nativity by the Dutch Golden Age artist Gerard Honthorst in the collection of the Uffizi in Florence. [1]

Painting

The Adoration of the Child shows a moonlit scene with Mary laying the Child in swaddling clothes. Joseph is looking over her shoulder and two angels are leaning over the crib. The moonlight is reflected off the faces in such a way that suggests the Child as a light source. The composition is reminiscent of much earlier versions, such as the 1490 Nativity at Night by Geertgen tot Sint Jans. The "Child as light source" aspect was used again and further exaggerated by Honthorst the next year when he painted the same subject, today held by the Wallraf-Richartz Museum.

Provenance

This painting is one of five paintings by Honthorst in the Uffizi, and all of them feature a tenebrist style that shows why the Italians call him Gherardo delle Notti or "Gerard of the Night". [2] Presumably these were all purchased in 1628 by Ferdinando II de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, who had just returned from a trip to Northern Europe and sent an intermediary to inquire after "6 paintings" that were for sale in Rome. [3]

References

  1. ^ painting record in the RKD
  2. ^ 739 in Florentine Museum
  3. ^ Florentijnsche Gegevens II by J.A.F. Orbaan in Oud Holland, Vol. 43 (1926), pp. 277-288
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adoration of the Child
Artist Gerard van Honthorst  Edit this on Wikidata
Year1619–1621
Medium oil paint, canvas
Dimensions95.5 cm (37.6 in) × 131 cm (52 in)
Location Uffizi
Identifiers RKDimages ID: 240573

Adoration of the Christ Child (Italian: Adorazione del Bambino), is a c. 1619–1621 oil on canvas painting of the Nativity by the Dutch Golden Age artist Gerard Honthorst in the collection of the Uffizi in Florence. [1]

Painting

The Adoration of the Child shows a moonlit scene with Mary laying the Child in swaddling clothes. Joseph is looking over her shoulder and two angels are leaning over the crib. The moonlight is reflected off the faces in such a way that suggests the Child as a light source. The composition is reminiscent of much earlier versions, such as the 1490 Nativity at Night by Geertgen tot Sint Jans. The "Child as light source" aspect was used again and further exaggerated by Honthorst the next year when he painted the same subject, today held by the Wallraf-Richartz Museum.

Provenance

This painting is one of five paintings by Honthorst in the Uffizi, and all of them feature a tenebrist style that shows why the Italians call him Gherardo delle Notti or "Gerard of the Night". [2] Presumably these were all purchased in 1628 by Ferdinando II de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, who had just returned from a trip to Northern Europe and sent an intermediary to inquire after "6 paintings" that were for sale in Rome. [3]

References

  1. ^ painting record in the RKD
  2. ^ 739 in Florentine Museum
  3. ^ Florentijnsche Gegevens II by J.A.F. Orbaan in Oud Holland, Vol. 43 (1926), pp. 277-288

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