Holy Family | |
Artist: | Andrea del Sarto[1] |
Year: | 1528–1529[2] |
Medium: | Oil on wood |
Height Metric: | 140 |
Width Metric: | 104 |
Metric Unit: | cm |
Imperial Unit: | in |
City: | Rome |
Museum: | Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica |
The Holy Family, an oil-on-wood painting of 1528–1529 by the Italian Renaissance painter Andrea del Sarto, is in the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica (Palazzo Barberini) in Rome.
The painting was commissioned in Florence by a Zanobi Strozzi for the chapel at his Villa of Rovezzano. It was cited by Giorgio Vasari in his biography of Sarto, who would die of the plague the next year. However, in 1580, the painting was sold by Monsignor Antonio Bracci to Jacopo Salviati, and it became part of the collections of the Colonna and later the Barberini, until it was purchased by the Italian state in 1935.
The painting depicts the Christ child in the lap of his mother, the Virgin Mary, while an elder Joseph meditatively contemplates the scene from a slightly recessed position. While the Virgin and Child form a geometric triangle, the work departs from a more equanimous Renaissance style in the exuberant folds of the robes and the slight angling of the faces.[3]