Madonna and Child with St Jerome explained

Madonna and Child with St Jerome
Artist:Pinturicchio
Year:1481
Medium:Oil on panel
Height Metric:49.5
Width Metric:38
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:in
City:Berlin
Museum:Gemäldegalerie

The Madonna and Child with St Jerome is a painting by the Italian Renaissance master Pinturicchio, painted in 1481 and housed in the Gemäldegalerie of Berlin, Germany.[1]

Description

The painting shows an infrequent composition, with the Virgin holding the Child who writes on a book, an allusion to his intervention in the Holy Books. On the right is St. Jerome, recognizable by his cardinal dress, leaving a book on the marble throne where the Madonna sits: in this case this is one of his traditional attributes of knowledge.

Jesus wears a pearl-lined coif which can be seen in another Pinturicchio's work of the period, the Crucifixion between Sts. Jerome and Christoper (c. 1475), now at the Borghese Gallery. The theme, used also by Fiorenzo di Lorenzo, was later abandoned by the Umbrian artist in favour of a free, curly hair.

On the right is an open landscape, a typical element of the Renaissance Umbrian school.

References

  1. Web site: Maria mit dem Kind und dem Heiligen Hieronymus . 2024-04-22 . Staatliche Museen zu Berlin (Berlin State Museums).

Sources

. Cristina Acidini . Pintoricchio . Pittori del Rinascimento . Scala . Florence . 2004 . 88-8117-099-X.