St. Francis (?) Interceding with the Virgin on behalf of a Female Saint

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St. Francis (?) Interceding with the Virgin on behalf of a Female Saint

Creator

Juan Martín Cabezalero

Spanish Artist · 1633–1673

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Juan Martín Cabezalero's early death ended an extremely promising career; his rare surviving works are known for their consistently high quality. Modest and studious, Cabezalero trained with Juan Carreño de Miranda, Madrid's most prominent court painter after Diego Velázquez. The two were on such close terms that in 1666 Cabezalero was still living in Carreño's house. Both artists shared an admira

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Date
about 1665–1670
Medium
Pen and brown ink, brown wash over black chalk
Culture
Spanish
Department
Drawings
Institution
Getty Museum

This devotional drawing portrays an unidentified female saint experiencing a vision of a male saint, possibly Saint Francis, interceding between her and the Virgin Mary. The artist thoughtfully rendered facial expressions and garments such as the monk's robe and the Virgin Mary's mantle. The broken pen lines used for outlining, however, convey a sense of vagueness appropriate to the depiction of a spiritual vision. The execution of the hands, simply represented by three or four hulking fingers, further underscores the subject's ambiguity. The purpose of the obscure figure in the upper right corner, who remarkably displays both musculature and skeletal features, is unknown. This part may be a preparatory study for a corner of a curved ceiling. The object held by the Virgin Mary, a second unknown feature of this drawing, might provide a clue to the identity of the female saint and the meaning of the vision. The monumental figures, the close-up composition, and the use of sepia wash were common to artists working in Madrid in the early 1600s.

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