The Holy Family with Saint John the Baptist and Saint Margaret

Description

Lippi’s sophisticated composition gracefully overlaps five figures in a round format. Oliviero Carafa, Cardinal of Naples, commissioned this work, although Lippi probably painted it in Rome while working for the cardinal’s family, an example of the widespread taste across Italy for the art of Florence. Meticulously detailed still-life elements on the parapet, thick with symbolic meaning, reflect Lippi’s interest in northern European painting he would have seen in Florence. Likewise the classical architecture—referring to the pagan world cast off by Christianity—demonstrates his engagement with ancient art and architecture in Rome. Embellished with learned references and made with expensive materials, this painting would have actively inspired religious meditation and demonstrated the patrons’ courtly, civilized taste.

Provenance

Carafa family, Palazzo Sant'Angelo, Naples (1858-1898); Mrs. Samuel D. Warren, Boston (1898); Edward Warren, Lewes House, England (1928); H. A. Thomas (1929); Harry Woodbury Parsons, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art. (1932); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1932-)

The Holy Family with Saint John the Baptist and Saint Margaret

Filippino Lippi

c. 1488–93

Accession Number

1932.227

Medium

tempera and oil on wood

Dimensions

Framed: 184 x 186 x 9.5 cm (72 7/16 x 73 1/4 x 3 3/4 in.); Diameter: 153 cm (60 1/4 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

The Delia E. Holden Fund and a fund donated as a memorial to Mrs. Holden by her children: Guerdon S. Holden, Delia Holden White, Roberta Holden Bole, Emery Holden Greenough, Gertrude Holden McGinley