Madre della Consolazione

Madre della Consolazione is a tempera painting created by Greek painter Nikolaos Tzafouris. Tzafouris was active during the second half of the 15th century. He was a prominent member of the Cretan School. He was influenced by Angelos Akotantos. The painter was exposed to works of Giovanni Bellini. At some point, he traveled to Venice and studied painting in the city. He is considered one of the most important painters because he introduced two prototypes that were mass produced by Cretan workshops. The painter is attributed with starting the specific style on the island of Crete. Most historians refer to the style as the Italian style Madonna in comparison to its Greek counterparts. Madre della Consolazione is very important because it served as a prototype for workshops on the island and it was heavily copied. Famous Greek painter Nikolaos Gripiotis and his contemporaries mass-produced the prototype. It is very difficult to attribute unsigned works because the prototype was mass-produced.[1][2][3]

Madre della Consolazione
See adjacent text.
ArtistNikolaos Tzafouris
Yearc. 1490
MediumPanel, gesso, tempera
MovementCretan School
Dimensions44 cm × 35.5 cm (17 in × 14.0 in)
LocationNetherlands
OwnerPrivate Collection

Description

The painting is an excellent example of the migration from the traditional Greek Byzantine style to the Italian Renaissance style. The work was heavily influenced by Bellini's Madonna and Child. The prototype is made of tempera and gold leaf. It was completed towards the end of the 15th century. The height of the work is 44 cm (17 in.) the width of the work is 35.5 cm (14 in.). The painter features heavy folds of fabric. He mastered a unique shadowing technique prevalent in the work. Mary's garment features curved lines. The Virgin has a fuller face. The Virgin's garment is held together by a decorative brooch clasp. The young Christ child is held gently by his majestic heavenly mother. He is sitting in the traditional hodegetria position. He holds a sphere representing the world instead of the traditional scroll. The Virgin and Christ child face Rome looking at the holy city from Constantinople. The infant is blessing the west. His shirt features decorative stars.[4] The work of art was part of the collection of the Morsink Icon Gallery in Amsterdam until 2016. The work was purchased by a private collector from the Netherlands. Two of his notable works are in the Netherlands. The second one bears his signature. The signature was discovered in 1999.[5]

Attribution

It is very difficult to pinpoint the workshop that completed the masterpiece due to over production of the same image. Scholars denoted that the work featured similar floral punched motifs that are prevalent in the halos of a signed version in Tzafouris's Pietà painting. The work is in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. The halos of the Madre della Consolazione painting often exhibited in the Ikonen-Museum Recklinghausen, Germany in a signed work created by Tzafouris also exhibit similar characteristics. The work is part of a private collection in the Netherlands. The characteristics all resemble Tzafouris's work or a painter from his immediate circle.[6]

Similar works

See Also

References

  1. Richardson 2007, pp. 200.
  2. Voulgaropoulou 2020, pp. 213–15.
  3. Evans, Helen C. (28 March 2004). Byzantium: Faith and Power (1261-1557). Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.). p. 483. ISBN 9781588391131.
  4. Voulgaropoulou 2020, pp. 216.
  5. Eugenia Drakopoulou (22 July 2022). "The Virgin Madre della Consolazione". Institute for Neohellenic Research. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  6. Haustein-Bartsch, Eva (2001). "Eine Neuentdeckte Ikone der Madre della Consolazione von Nikolaos Tzafoures" [A Newly Discovered Icon of Madre Della Consolazione by Nikolaos Tzafoures]. Newsletter of the Christian Archaeological Society (in German). Athens. 40: 135–140. doi:10.12681/dchae.298.

Bibliography

Attributed Madre della Consolazione

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