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Triptych of the Mystical Marriage of St Catharina
Historical Context
The Master of the Holy Blood painted this Triptych of the Mystical Marriage of Saint Catherine around 1510, a Bruges workshop production depicting the devotional vision in which Catherine receives a ring from the Christ Child, flanked by subsidiary saints on the wings. The Mystical Marriage was one of the most popular subjects in Flemish devotional painting, combining mystical theology with the visual conventions of the betrothal scene familiar from secular marriage portraiture. This anonymous Bruges master maintains the technical standards of the city's late medieval workshop tradition—meticulous paint surfaces, careful spatial construction, individualized figure types—while adapting the composition to the triptych format that remained the standard vehicle for major private and institutional devotional commissions.
Technical Analysis
The triptych demonstrates the workshop's refined Bruges technique with smooth modeling, rich color, and the decorative elegance characteristic of late Bruges devotional painting.




