Madonna and Child with Child Saint John and angels
Andrea del Sarto·1518
Historical Context
This 1518 Madonna and Child with the infant Saint John and angels dates from Andrea del Sarto's mature period, when he was at the height of his powers as Florence's leading painter. The composition reflects the influence of both Raphael and Fra Bartolommeo, synthesized into Andrea's own warm, naturalistic idiom. 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
Andrea's masterful use of color and atmospheric light creates a unified devotional image, with soft transitions between light and shadow that demonstrate his reputation as the foremost colorist of the Florentine school.
See It In Person
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Virgin and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist
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Virgin and Child with Saint Anne, Saint Gereon, and a Donor
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