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Seated Virgin Reading with the Christ Child and the Infant St John

Seated Virgin Reading with the Christ Child and the Infant St John

Parmigianino (Girolamo Francesco Maria Mazzola) (in circa 1534-1535)

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Specifications

Title Seated Virgin Reading with the Christ Child and the Infant St John
Material and technique Pen and brown ink, brown wash, heightened with white, on red prepared paper
Object type
Drawing > Two-dimensional object > Art object
Location This object is travelling
Dimensions Height 94 mm
Width 70 mm
Artists Draughtsman: Parmigianino (Girolamo Francesco Maria Mazzola)
Accession number I 30 recto (PK)
Credits Loan Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (former Koenigs collection), 1940
Department Drawings & Prints
Acquisition date 1940
Creation date in circa 1534-1535
Watermark not possible to establish (small fragment of paper, laid down, vV, ?P)
Collector Collector / Franz Koenigs
Provenance Sir Peter Lely (1618-1680, L.2092)****, London; Jonathan Richardson Sr. (1665-1745, L.2184)*, London; Charles-Paul-Jean-Baptiste de Bourgevin Vialart, Comte de Saint-Morys (1743-95, L.474), London (1790-95); his son Charles-Étienne de Bourgevin Vialart, Comte de Carrière (1772-1817); his sale, London (Phillips) 10-14.06.1797, day #, lot #; - ; Franz W. Koenigs (1881-1941, L.1023a), Haarlem, acquired in 1925 (Parmigianino); D.G. van Beuningen (1877-1955), Rotterdam, acquired with the Koenigs Collection in 1940 and donated to Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
Exhibitions Rotterdam 1997-98; Rotterdam 2009 (coll 2 kw 4)
Internal exhibitions Rondom Raphaël (1997)
De Collectie Twee - wissel IV, Prenten & Tekeningen (2009)
Research Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
Literature Harprath 1971, p. 64; Popham 1971, no. 566, pl. 360; Ragghianti Collobi 1972, p. 121; Ragghianti Collobi 1974, p. 122; Pouncey 1976, p. 176; Goldman 1995, p. 149; Vaccaro 2002, no. 36; Gnann 2007, no. 898; London 2022a, p. 77, n. 13
Material
Object
Technique
Prepare > Prepared > Shaping techniques > General technique > Technique > Material and technique
Prepare > Prepared > Shaping techniques > General technique > Technique > Material and technique
Highlight > Painting technique > Technique > Material and technique
Brown wash > Washing > Wash > Drawing technique > Technique > Material and technique
Geographical origin Italy > Southern Europe > Europe

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Entry catalogue Italian Drawings 1400-1600

Author: Surya Stemerding

Parmigianino, 'Madonna with the Long Neck', 1534-40, oil on panel, 216.5 x 132.5 cm, Gallerie degli Uffizi, Florence. Photo Gallerie degli Uffizi, Florence

Harprath (1971) recognized this sheet as an early preliminary study for Parmigianino’s most famous work, the Madonna with the Long Neck, now in the Uffizi (fig.). He painted it in 1534-35 for Elena Baiardi Tagliaferri as an altarpiece for her family chapel in Santa Maria dei Servi in Parma. Although the contract of 1534 stipulated that the artist would complete the painting within five months, it was not installed in the chapel until after his death. It was almost finished at that time, with just a few areas in the background left incomplete.[1]

It can be seen from the fifty surviving preliminary studies how the remarkable composition of this exceptional altarpiece slowly but surely took on its eventual form.[2] From a symmetrical visual arrangement borrowed from conventional sacra conversazione scenes, Parmigianino developed his own composition step by step, with many variations in both the placement and make-up of the figure group in the foreground and in the architectural background. This resulted in the extraordinarily original frontal elegance of the Virgin, with an unusually large Christ Child asleep on her lap. There is little still to be seen of that end result in the Rotterdam drawing, although the artist has already started on an initial design for the colonnade. The seated Virgin is turned to the right with her head in profile as she reads a book she holds up in front of her. The young John the Baptist with the lamb is seated at her feet. He is present in most of the following preliminary studies, and was only abandoned towards the end of the design process. In front of and between the background columns are two figures who are probably Sts Francis and Jerome. They occupy prominent positions in all the other design variants. The Christ Child is depicted beside the Virgin in each early stage of the design. It was only late in the process that Parmigianino experimented with the reclining Christ on his mother’s lap in a prefiguration of the Lamentation after his death on the Cross.

It is clear that the Rotterdam drawing has a place in the long series of design studies from its affinity with two other early studies that are now in Parma and Venice.[3] The former is the only other drawing in which the Virgin is holding a book, and is regarded as preceding the Rotterdam study. There she is still frontal, and the architectural background is missing. A drawing on the back of the Venice sheet is the earliest to have background columns.[4] The close relationship of the Rotterdam drawing to the Parma sheet is apparent from the block on which the Virgin is seated and the Child’s pose, with one small foot on the large block and the other on his mother’s lap. The reclining saint in the background of the Rotterdam drawing is more prominent in the Parma sheet. Grant Lewis has observed that the Rotterdam drawing is the only study for the painting in which the light enters from the right and, curiously, John the Baptist is lit from the other direction.[5]

The drawing itself is a small, irregularly cropped fragment laid down on a slightly larger sheet prior to the addition of the Virgin’s head above the eyebrows. Ragghianti Collobi (1972) believed that he recognized the hand of Giorgio Vasari (1511-1574) in this, and suggested that the drawing was once part of his Libro de’ Disegni. The crude sketch on the back of the secondary sheet was added by another draughtsman.

Footnotes

[1] Ricci 1895, vol. 1, pp. 24 ff.

[2] Gnann 2007, pp. 284-94.

[3] Galleria Nazionale, inv. 510/26; Gallerie dell’Accademia, inv. 378. Incidentally, the designs are not by definition chronological. As Gnann (2007) has argued, Parmigianino usually worked on several design variants at the same time.

[4] Di Giampaolo 1983, p. 17, no. 6.

[5] London 2022a, p. 77, under no. 9, n. 13.

Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
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Parmigianino (Girolamo Francesco Maria Mazzola)

Parma 1503 - Casal Maggiore 1540

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