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A Man and his Wife
Historical Context
The Master of the Legend of Saint Barbara was an anonymous Netherlandish painter active around 1470-1500. This double portrait of a man and his wife from around 1484 follows the established Netherlandish convention of depicting married couples as paired donor figures. Such paired portraits served both personal commemoration and devotional functions. This work belongs to the Early Renaissance, the transformative period in European art when painters first applied mathematical perspective, naturalistic figure modeling, and archaeological interest in antiquity to the inherited traditions of medieval devotional painting.
Technical Analysis
Oil on panel with careful Netherlandish portrait technique rendering both sitters' features. The paired format and dignified poses follow established conventions for marital portrait commissions.
See It In Person
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Heinrichstafel: The imperial coronation of St. Henry II and the handover of the realm sword
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The visitation and the legends of the foundation of S. Maria ad Nives in Rome, with the donor Claudio Villa
Master of the Legend of Saint Barbara·1485



