The Madonna of Humility

Getty Museum

The Madonna of Humility

Creator

Robert Campin

Artist · 1375–1444

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Robert Campin was a key innovator in shifting the early Netherlandish school from the Gothic and into the Renaissance. Although his life in Tournai is well recorded, none of his documented works survives in adequate condition to serve as a basis for attributing other paintings to him. Scholars generally accept, however, that a number of paintings grouped as the work of the Master of Flémalle are C

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Date
about 1450–1470
Medium
Oil on panel
Culture
Netherlandish
Department
Paintings
Institution
Getty Museum

The Madonna of Humility, an extremely popular subject in Flanders, sits on the ground on a cushion, presenting the haloed Christ Child in her arms. A crescent visible below her skirts at the left symbolizes the moon on which the Virgin stands in representations of the Immaculate Conception. The open and closed books symbolize the Old and New Testaments, and the lilies to the right symbolize Mary's purity. The apple in Christ's hands and mouth alludes to original sin and his future sacrifice. In this painting, the artist preserved the rich colors and detailed focus of his predecessors, the illuminated manuscript painters, while attempting to create a coherent spatial world. The river winds into the background, yet the townscape in the distance is rendered with as much clarity as the trim on the Virgin's drapery. Minutely observed details demonstrate the early Netherlandish interest in creating a convincing illusion of three-dimensional reality on a flat panel.

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