Nativity of the Virgin | |
Artist: | Albrecht Altdorfer |
Year: | c. 1520 |
Medium: | Oil on panel |
Height Metric: | 140.7 |
Width Metric: | 130 |
Metric Unit: | cm |
Imperial Unit: | in |
Museum: | Alte Pinakothek |
City: | Munich |
The Nativity of the Virgin is an oil-on-panel painting by the German Renaissance artist Albrecht Altdorfer, dating to c. 1520, which is now in the Alte Pinakothek in Munich.
The work uses a scenic composition typical of the Danube school of the time. The subject, the birth of Mary, is shown in a secondary location in the lower part of the painting. It includes St. Anne's bed, the midwives with the daughter. St. Joachim, having been out for provisions, returns with a bundle slung from his staff across his shoulder.[1]
The predominant part of the work is the church background, where angels fly to form a large circle: in the middle is a young angel with a thurible for incense. The edifice, symbolizing the analogy between Mary and the Catholic church (a subject later abolished by the Protestant Reformation), is organized in a complicated and original fashion: the ambulatory and the column galleries are Romanesque, the ogival windows are Gothic, the vaults and the shell-shaped niches are in Renaissance style. This attention to architectural elements was typical of Altdorfer's work in the period he spent at the court of Maximilian I.