Madonna and Child with a Male Saint, Catherine of Alexandria and a Donor

Getty Museum

Madonna and Child with a Male Saint, Catherine of Alexandria and a Donor

Creator

Michelangelo di Pietro Membrini

Italian Artist · 1461–1464

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Michelangelo di Pietro Membrini's name was only matched to the work of the Master of the Lathrop Tondo in 1985. His distinctive artistic style, or hand, was first identified in the Getty Museum's tondo early in this century. By the 1960s connoisseurs had identified a body of work of nearly thirty paintings. In 1985 documentation was uncovered for one of these pictures, becoming the first proof of

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Date
about 1496
Medium
Tempera on panel
Culture
Italian
Department
Paintings
Institution
Getty Museum

The focus of this meditative scene is the Virgin nursing the infant Christ. An elderly gentleman on the left bows his head in prayer. Though he is without definitively identifying attributes, his red cloak may indicate that he is Saint Jerome, who is often shown wearing the red robes of a cardinal. The coats of arms of two noble families of the city of Lucca hang from the pilasters which flank the Madonna: the Guinigi to the left, the Buonvisi to the right. The painting may have been commissioned to celebrate the union of these prominent Italian families. Directly below Saint Jerome, a donor gazes up at the Virgin and Child, his hat removed and hands clasped in reverence. He may be Michele Guinigi, a member of a wealthy merchant family who was pledged to marry Caterina Buonvisi. Caterina herself perhaps appears on the right, in the guise of her namesake Saint Catherine of Alexandria, who holds a broken wheel, the symbol of her martyrdom. A *tondo*, derived from the Italian word *rotondo*, meaning round, was a type of painting that was circular in format which enjoyed particular popularity for display in domestic settings in central Italy in the second half of the fifteenth century. Its shape is thought to derive, in part, from the so-called *desco da parto* or “birth tray”—a circular decorative tray on which sweetmeats were presented to new mothers. The round format soon migrated to paintings which were produced to celebrate a marriage union or the birth of a child, to express hope for a pregnancy or the safe delivery of a child. The painting’s authorship was uncertain at the time it entered the Getty collection, when the artist was known as “Master of the Lathrop Tondo,” in reference to the painting’s former location in the Lathrop collection in New York. By 1985, a body of work of approximately thirty paintings was attributed to the unknown artist, who was later identified as Lucchese painter Michelangelo di Pietro Membrini.

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