The Sacrifice of Isaac

Description

In this dramatic test of faith from the Old Testament book of Genesis, Abraham agrees to slay his son Isaac on God’s command. As Abraham raises the knife, an angel suddenly appears to halt the sacrifice. This work gains its power from the complex expressions of father and son, combining grief, strength, resignation, fear, and realization in their faces and bodies, the latter inspired by ancient sculpture and Michelangelo. Andrea del Sarto never finished this painting, and it lays bare his working methods. He transferred the design to the panel from a drawing, reinforcing the chalk with painted lines—best seen in the donkey at the far right. He then worked over the whole panel at once with thin, brushy veils of color, letting him alter the composition while painting—especially evident in the angel, Isaac’s body, and Abraham’s head.

Provenance

Cardinal Carlo de' Medici, Florence (By 1649); Possibly the Montalvi Collection, Florence; Possibly the Peruzzi Collection, Florence; Zondadari Collection, Florence (By 1829); William Cave, died 1858 (Brentry House, near Bristol, bought in Florence in 1846), by inheritance to his wife. (1846 - 1858); Mrs. William Cave (1858); Sold, Christie's, London, June 22, 1858, lot 102 (1858); Possibly Peters (1858 - 1882); George Cornwall Legh, High Legh, Co. Chester (1882 - ?); Lieutenant Colonel Henry Cornwall Legh, High Legh, Co. Chester (? - 1935); Sold at Sotheby's, London, May 21, 1935, to Spencer Samuels (1935); Spencer Samuels, T. Harris, London, and Durlacher Brothers, New York (1935 - 1937); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1937 -)

The Sacrifice of Isaac

Andrea del Sarto

c. 1527

Accession Number

1937.577

Medium

oil on wood

Dimensions

Framed: 208 x 171 x 12.5 cm (81 7/8 x 67 5/16 x 4 15/16 in.); Unframed: 178 x 138 cm (70 1/16 x 54 5/16 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Delia E. Holden and L. E. Holden Funds