Madonna with Beardless Saint Joseph explained

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Madonna with Beardless Saint Joseph
Artist:Raphael
Year:c. 1506
Type:Tempera on canvas (transferred from panel)
Height Metric:72.5
Width Metric:56.5
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:in
City:Saint Petersburg
Museum:Hermitage Museum

The Madonna with Beardless Saint Joseph is an early painting by Raphael, executed, now at the Hermitage Museum. It depicts Saint Joseph, the Virgin Mary, and the Christ Child.

It is usually thought to be one of the small Madonnas painted by Raphael for Guidobaldo da Montefeltro during his one of his brief stays in Urbino between 1505 and 1506, and which Giorgio Vasari saw in that city.[1] The earliest definitive mention of the Hermitage work dates to the 18th century, when it was probably in the Duke of Angoulême's collection in Paris.[2] From there it passed into the collection of Pierre Crozat, which was bought almost in its entirety by Catherine II of Russia in 1772, forming the core of the future Hermitage Museum.[3]

The work was restored early in the 19th century, leading Alexander Pushkin to write the poem Renaissance and to refer to the work in his Mozart and Salieri, having his version of Salieri state "I don't find it funny when the painter is useless / It stains Raphael's Madonna for me".[4]

The National Gallery applied for the work to be loaned to its 2020 exhibition marking the 500th anniversary of the artist's death, but this was delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic until 2022, and permission for its loan was withdrawn following the Russian invasion of Ukraine that year.[5]

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Notes and References

  1. Pierluigi De Vecchi. Raffaello Rizzoli, Milano 1975.
  2. Paolo Franzese, Raffaello, Mondadori Arte, Milano 2008
  3. Web site: Catalogue entry.
  4. Пушкин А. С. Собрание сочинений. В 10-ти томах. Т. I. Стихотворения 1813—1824. — М.: Художественная литература, 1974. — С. 656. — 744 с. — 500 000 экз.
  5. Nicholas Cranfield, 'The Credit Suisse Exhibition: Raphael at the National Gallery, London', Church Times, 1 July 2022, page 27