• Venice, 1505
  • Tempera and oil (?) on panel
  • Inv. 208
  • Signed and dated: VICTOR CARPATHIUS/MDV

Holy Family and Donors

Vittore Carpaccio

This painting, whose central theme is the Adoration of the Child, dates from 1505 and is considered to be one of the artist’s most remarkable works. The cartellino on the base of the panel bears an inscription that reads ‘VICTOR CARPATHIUS/MDV’.

The donors, who were sure to have been prominent figures in Venetian society, are represented realistically on the same scale as the sacred characters. This manner of integrating elements into the scene is a figurative practice that became widespread in the fifteenth century and reflects the influence of humanist values on art. The Child, who is lacking in any divine attributes, assumes a worldly aspect at the centre of the composition.

The painter represents the episode by using overlapping, independent narrative planes in rich, luminous colours that develop a sense of depth. The perspective is suggested by the alteration in the scale of the figures while the mid-ground consists of the wise men on horseback arranged in a line. A progressive softening of colour leads the observer’s eye to the subtle differentiation marking the boundary between sky and land.

The complexity of the composition, which features harmoniously positioned verticals and diagonals and painstakingly rendered decorative groups, once again points to a fundamental aim of the period: the search for equilibrium.

Richard Henry, 7th Baron of Berwick, London; Thomas Henry, 8th Baron of Berwick. Acquired by Calouste Gulbenkian through Colnaghi, London, on 9 December 1924.

H. 90.1 cm; W. 133.9 cm

Washington D. C. 1950

European Paintings from the Gulbenkian Collection, exhibition catalogue. Washington D. C.: National Gallery of Art, 1950, pp. 16–17, cat. 3.

Lauts 1962

Jan Lauts, Carpaccio Paintings and Drawings. London: Phaidon, 1962, pp. 243–4, cat. 57.

Venice 1963

Pietro Zampetti, Vittore Carpaccio, exhibition catalogue. Venice: Palazzo Ducale, 1963, pp. 220–3, no. 47.

Sampaio 2009

Luísa Sampaio, Painting in the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum. Lisbon/Milan: Calouste Gulbenkian Museum/Skira, 2009, pp. 36–7, cat. 10.

Lisbon 2011

Calouste Gulbenkian Museum. Lisbon: Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, 2011, p. 107, cat. 82.

Updated on 15 june 2022

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