The Holy Family with Saint Catherine of Alexandria

* Nearly 20,000 images of artworks the museum believes to be in the public domain are available to download on this site. Other images may be protected by copyright and other intellectual property rights. By using any of these images you agree to LACMA's Terms of Use.

The Holy Family with Saint Catherine of Alexandria

1581
Paintings
Oil on canvas
Canvas: 43 × 34 3/4 in. (109.22 × 88.27 cm) Framed: 51 × 44 × 4 in. (129.54 × 111.76 × 10.16 cm)
Gift of The Ahmanson Foundation (M.2011.2)
Not currently on public view

Curator Notes

Lavinia Fontana was one of the most successful female artists of the Renaissance whose practice centered on portraits of the aristocratic citizens of her native Bologna....
Lavinia Fontana was one of the most successful female artists of the Renaissance whose practice centered on portraits of the aristocratic citizens of her native Bologna. Unusually for a woman, her work also included religious and mythological subjects. She was born into an artistic family in 1552. Her father, Prospero Fontana (1512-1597) was an enlightened Mannerist painter known as much for his paintings, many of which betray his apprenticeship under Vasari, as for his passion for literature and his taste for antiques which he collected. Lavinia’s early education took place in this refined milieu. Rapidly she was able to negotiate the complicated paths and obstacles set in front of her: as a woman she learned how to navigate the complexities of personal rank, as well as admittance by peers, connoisseurs and dealers. Devout, she married and had many children: she was proud of being an exemplary mother while gaining recognition and even popularity. Her fame reached Rome. In 1604, Pope Clement VII called her there. Her later years in Rome were marked by success as well. This fine “Sacra Conversazione” ranks among the most accomplished works of the painter. Its softness – which owes much to both Raphael and Correggio, sets it apart from many of her paintings in which the artist continues the decorative and somewhat stiff manner of her father. Indeed this may have had to do with Lavinia’s intention to participate in the Counter Reformation movement and to follow carefully the suggestions of the Bolognese Cardinal Paleotti (1522 1597) whose treatise Discorso intorno alle immagini sacre e profane (1592) was a manual intended to explain the clarity and simplicity required by the Council of Trent in the treatment of religious images. Here Lavinia clearly attempts to reform the Mannerist tradition and to introduce through emotional interaction and expressive gestures the kind of art capable of “moving the spirit” recommended by Cardinal Paleotti. (J. Patrice Marandel, The Robert H. Ahmanson Chief Curator of European Art)
More...

Provenance

Charles-Jean de Bertin (1716–1774), bishop of Vannes (1746–74), by 1757.

...

Charles-Jean de Bertin (1716–1774), bishop of Vannes (1746–74), by 1757. James Edward Harris (1807–1889), 3rd Earl of Malmesbury,(1) by 1868, by inheritance to; Lord Malmesbury (probably James Edward Harris, 5th Earl of Malmesbury [1872–1950]) (sale, London, Christie’s, 4 May 1925, lot 9, sold to); [Fritze].(2) Anonymous (sale, Stockholm, Bukowski, 9–12 Nov. 1966, lot 139, ill., sold to); anonymous, given 1967 to a Swedish religious institution. (Sale, Stockholm, Stockholms Auktionsverk, 26 Nov. 2009, lot 2275, sold to); [Richard L. Feigen & Co., New York, sold 2011 to]; LACMA.

Footnotes

(1) He served as foreign secretary and as Lord Privy Seal, the office he held in 1868, when the painting was lent to Leeds.

(2) Probably a reference to Fritzes Houbokhandel (Art Galleries and Book Stores), Stockholm.


More...

Bibliography

  • Lehmbeck, Leah, editor. Gifts of European Art from The Ahmanson Foundation. Vol. 1, Italian Painting and Sculpture. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2019.
  • Straussman-Pflanzer, Eve, and Oliver Tostmann, eds. By Her Hand: Artemisia Gentileschi and Women Artists in Italy, 1500-1800. Detroit: Detroit Institute of Arts, 2021.