
Maria met slapend kind
Joos van Cleve·1524
Historical Context
Joos van Cleve's Maria met slapend kind belongs to the large body of devotional Madonnas the Antwerp master produced for wealthy merchant and courtly patrons of early sixteenth-century Flanders. Van Cleve was among the most prolific painters of Virgin and Child images in the Northern Renaissance, working in a style that blended Flemish naturalism with Italian Renaissance influence. The sleeping Christ Child, his arms extended in a posture that prefigures the crucifixion, introduced devotional meditation on the Passion into an apparently tender domestic scene.
Technical Analysis
Oil on panel allows the delicate, layered technique characteristic of Flemish practice — the Child's translucent skin, the Virgin's blue mantle with its careful folds, and a landscape background in atmospheric perspective rendered with fine, controlled brushwork.
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