Spanish school (XIX) - Virgen Inmaculada Concepción






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Description from the seller
It is a devotional oil painting that fits perfectly within the iconography of the Immaculate Conception, that representation in which Mary appears standing atop a bed of clouds, surrounded by cherubs and, above all, stepping on the serpent as a sign of victory over evil. The crown, the deep blue mantle and the reddish tunic follow the traditional canon that solidified between the 17th and 19th centuries, and which continued to be reproduced in religious workshops throughout that period.
The presence of the Child in arms — somewhat less common in strict Immaculates — also brings the work closer to the typology of the Virgin of the Heart or Queen Virgin with the Child, a variant very widespread in 19th-century popular and academic art, where Marian symbols are combined with maternal tenderness. The Child, with the heart highlighted on the chest, reinforces that affective and devotional reading.
The workmanship of the painting, with soft brushwork, slightly blurred contours and a palette of subdued tones, suggests a work from the 19th century or even earlier, perhaps from a regional workshop that followed late Baroque models. The craquelure, the darkening of the varnishes and the small losses of pictorial layer speak of an evident passage of time, that natural aging that only appears in oils over a century old.
Certified shipping and good packaging.
Seller's Story
It is a devotional oil painting that fits perfectly within the iconography of the Immaculate Conception, that representation in which Mary appears standing atop a bed of clouds, surrounded by cherubs and, above all, stepping on the serpent as a sign of victory over evil. The crown, the deep blue mantle and the reddish tunic follow the traditional canon that solidified between the 17th and 19th centuries, and which continued to be reproduced in religious workshops throughout that period.
The presence of the Child in arms — somewhat less common in strict Immaculates — also brings the work closer to the typology of the Virgin of the Heart or Queen Virgin with the Child, a variant very widespread in 19th-century popular and academic art, where Marian symbols are combined with maternal tenderness. The Child, with the heart highlighted on the chest, reinforces that affective and devotional reading.
The workmanship of the painting, with soft brushwork, slightly blurred contours and a palette of subdued tones, suggests a work from the 19th century or even earlier, perhaps from a regional workshop that followed late Baroque models. The craquelure, the darkening of the varnishes and the small losses of pictorial layer speak of an evident passage of time, that natural aging that only appears in oils over a century old.
Certified shipping and good packaging.
