Holy Family

Description

This view of the Holy Family in an interior is filled with the trappings of a comfortable bourgeois existence. Its unknown maker was probably working from a repertory of pattern drawings derived from the most innovative Netherlandish painters of the early 15th century, Rogier van der Weyden and Jan van Eyck. The pose of the Virgin and the buffet with its brass and pewter vessels are particularly indebted to their work. At the same time, the painting’s dry style and its use of a spruce rather than an oak panel for the support are indications that it was made in Southern Germany.

Provenance

Louis Ehrich, New York, by 1888; placed on deposit at Yale University Art Gallery, 1888–94 Chicago Herald 1888; and [Cook] 1888; for the Ehrich pictures on deposit at Yale, see [Clarence Cook], “The Ehrich Collection of Old Dutch and Flemish Pictures,” Studio, n.s., 3, 9 (1888), pp. 132–34]; sold, Fifth Avenue Art Galleries, New York, Jan. 22–23, 1895, no. 93, as Roger van der Weyden. Martin A. Ryerson (d. 1932), Chicago, by 1924 [according to registrar’s receipt; Ryerson probably acquired it at or shortly after the Ehrich sale, since he possessed a guarantee (now Art Institute Archives) signed by Ehrich referring to “number 93” in the sale and giving a price of $775]; on loan to the AIC from 1924; bequeathed to the AIC, 1933.

Holy Family

German

c. 1450

Accession Number

16275

Medium

Oil on panel

Dimensions

50.2 × 47.8 cm (19 3/4 × 18 3/4 in.); Framed: 59.7 × 59.1 cm (23 1/2 × 23 1/4 in.)

Classification

oil on panel

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Mr. and Mrs. Martin A. Ryerson Collection