About the Artwork
Luis Salvador Carmona, one of the foremost sculptors of the Spanish Rococo, carved this Virgin and Child from many blocks of wood, skillfully lending Mary’s garments the complex silhouettes then fashionable in Madrid. The sculptor personally oversaw the layered application of paint and gilding to his works, and the figures’ skin and clothing retain their original, glowing surfaces.
A document dated 1750 attests to Carmona’s creation of this sculpture for the Chapel of the Royal Tapestry Factory in Madrid. The work was likely commissioned by the manufactory’s first director, Jacob Vandergotten, who emigrated along with many weavers from Flanders (present-day Belgium), a region famed for tapestry that had formed deep ties with Spain when both territories were ruled by members of the House of Habsburg. The sculpture depicts the infant Jesus grasping a cross upon which he meditates, iconography popular in the patron’s homeland but unusual in Spain. Vandergotten and his weavers formed a devotional brotherhood dedicated to Jesus and Mary, and this dedication may have informed Carmona’s design, who counted such confraternities among his best clients.
Virgin and Child
ca. 1750
Luis Salvador Carmona
1708-1767
Spanish
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Polychrome coniferous wood, glass
Overall: 51 1/2 × 25 × 19 inches (130.8 × 63.5 × 48.3 cm)
Sculpture
European Sculpture and Dec Arts
Museum Purchase, Robert H. Tannahill Foundation Fund and Ernest and Rosemarie Kanzler Foundation Fund
2016.31
Public Domain
Markings
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Provenance
Chapel in the Real Fabrica de Tapices (Madrid, Spain).Van der Goten-Stuyck Family (Madrid, Spain).
(Colnaghi, London, England);
2016-present, purchase by the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)
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Credit Line for Reproduction
Luis Salvador Carmona, Virgin and Child, ca. 1750, polychrome coniferous wood, glass. Detroit Institute of Arts, Museum Purchase, Robert H. Tannahill Foundation Fund and Ernest and Rosemarie Kanzler Foundation Fund, 2016.31.
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