Accession Number
95629
Medium
Pen and iron gall ink with brush and brown wash, heightened with white gouache, on tan laid paper, pieced together and laid down on gray laid paper
Dimensions
40.1 × 24.2 cm (15 13/16 × 9 9/16 in.)
Classification
pen and ink drawings
Credit Line
The Leonora Hall Gurley Memorial Collection
Background & Context
Background Story
This drawing of The Assumption of the Virgin by Tintoretto captures the Venetian master in one of his most dramatically expressive and spiritually exuberant modes, the image showing the Virgin Mary being lifted to heaven with the same swirling energy and bold chiaroscuro that characterized his painted altarpieces. The composition is a vertical drawing—40.1 × 24.2 centimeters—showing the Virgin ascending with angels rendered in pen and iron gall ink with brush and brown wash heightened with white gouache on tan laid paper, the technique creating a surface of extraordinary depth and luminosity. The white gouache highlights create points of brilliance that suggest divine light and celestial radiance, while the brown wash provides atmospheric depth and dramatic shadow. The undated sheet probably belongs to the period of Tintoretto's mature work, when he was producing the drawings and paintings that established his reputation as the most dynamic and theatrical painter of the Venetian Renaissance. Art historians have connected this drawing to the broader tradition of the Assumption in Venetian art, from the altarpieces of Titian to the ceilings of Veronese, noting that Tintoretto's treatment is more focused on the dramatic action and the emotional intensity, the physical lifting of the body and the swirling movement of the angels, than the classical balance or the idealized beauty of these other traditions.
Cultural Impact
This undated Venetian drawing made Assumption theatrically dynamic through vertical 40cm iron-gall-ink brown-wash white-gouache celestial luminosity and tan-paper chiaroscuro depth, using mature-period energetic swirl to transform Virgin ascension beyond Titian classical idealized balance.
Why It Matters
It matters because Tintoretto drew the Virgin flying upward and made the paper feel like it was catching divine wind—proving that even a sketch could ascend if the wash was bold enough.