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The Virgin and Child by Andrea del Sarto

The Virgin and Child

Andrea del Sarto·1516

Historical Context

This 1516 Virgin and Child is a characteristic devotional panel from Andrea del Sarto's mature period, when he was producing a steady stream of Madonna paintings for Florentine patrons. The intimate half-length format was favored for private worship, and Andrea's tender, naturalistic treatments of the subject made him the preferred painter for such commissions. Andrea del Sarto was the supreme Florentine painter of the generation between Leonardo and Raphael on one hand and the Mannerists on the other. His Marian subjects achieve a synthesis of the three great strands of Florentine High Renaissance painting: Leonardo's atmospheric modeling and psychological depth, Raphael's compositional clarity and grace, and Michelangelo's sculptural authority in the rendering of the human figure. The result is painting of extraordinary quality — Vasari's "faultless painter" — in which technical mastery serves emotional truth without becoming virtuosity for its own sake.

Technical Analysis

The painting exemplifies Andrea's mature technique, with warm flesh tones modeled through subtle sfumato and a rich, harmonious palette that creates an atmosphere of gentle devotion.

Look Closer

  • ◆Andrea's characteristic cool tonality — slightly silvery rather than warm — is present in this half-length Madonna, where even the Virgin's mantle has a grey-blue depth.
  • ◆The Christ Child's gesture toward the Virgin is one of Andrea's most natural mother-child interactions — not a formal blessing but a reaching grasp.
  • ◆A landscape visible over the Virgin's shoulder carries one of Andrea's typical distant hillscapes — specific enough to feel observed but too idealized for topographic identification.
  • ◆The Virgin's hands support the Child with the practised ease of a real mother — Andrea observed actual maternal postures rather than relying on iconographic convention.
  • ◆The surface quality in the drapery — gradual, sfumato transitions between deep shadow and warm highlight — shows the technical influence of Leonardo that distinguishes Andrea among Florentines.

See It In Person

National Gallery of Canada

Ottawa, Canada

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
85.6 × 62.5 cm
Era
High Renaissance
Style
High Renaissance
Genre
Religious
Location
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa
View on museum website →

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Domenico da Gambassi by Andrea del Sarto

Domenico da Gambassi

Andrea del Sarto·1525–28

The Sacrifice of Isaac by Andrea del Sarto

The Sacrifice of Isaac

Andrea del Sarto·c. 1527

Portrait of a Woman by Andrea del Sarto

Portrait of a Woman

Andrea del Sarto·c. 1518

Charity by Andrea del Sarto

Charity

Andrea del Sarto·before 1530

More from the High Renaissance Period

Virgin and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist by Antonio da Correggio

Virgin and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist

Antonio da Correggio·c. 1515

Virgin and Child with Saint Anne, Saint Gereon, and a Donor by Bartholomaeus Bruyn the Elder

Virgin and Child with Saint Anne, Saint Gereon, and a Donor

Bartholomaeus Bruyn the Elder·1520

Scenes from the Life of Saint John the Baptist by Bartolomeo di Giovanni

Scenes from the Life of Saint John the Baptist

Bartolomeo di Giovanni·1490/95

The Martyrdom of Saint John the Baptist by Bernard van Orley

The Martyrdom of Saint John the Baptist

Bernard van Orley·ca. 1514–15