The Virgin and Child with St Anne

anonymous, c. 1500 - c. 1525

The Virgin and Child with St Anne. Oak, originally with polychromy. Holland, c. 1510.

  • Artwork typesculpture
  • Object numberBK-NM-2495
  • Dimensionsheight 31.5 cm x width 18 cm x depth 10 cm
  • Physical characteristicsoak

anonymous

The Virgin and Child with St Anne

Northern Netherlands, ? Utrecht, c. 1500 - c. 1525

Technical notes

Carved and originally polychromed. There are holes in the Virgin’s and St Anne’s heads to attach haloes or crowns. The reverse is flat and has a hole (Ø 1 cm) in it.


Condition

The polychromy has been removed with a caustic. The crowns or haloes worn by the Virgin and St Anne, the top part of the high back and the sides of the throne are missing.


Provenance

…; from the collection A.P. Hermans-Smits (1822-1897), Eindhoven, with numerous other objects (BK-NM-2001 to -2800), fl. 14,000 for all, to the Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst, The Hague, 1875; transferred to the museum, 1885

Object number: BK-NM-2495


Entry

St Anne sits on a throne, facing forward, with a half-open book in a pouch in her left hand. Her right hand rests caressingly on the back of her daughter’s head; the Virgin sits obliquely in front of her with the naked Christ child on her lap. The baby makes an impudent grab for his grandmother’s book. St Anne is depicted as an elderly woman and wears the usual headdress and chin-band. There are small holes in the women’s heads, where crowns or haloes, now lost, would have been attached.

This group, the iconography of which is also referred to as St Anne Trinity (in Dutch St. Anna-te-Drieën), was long regarded as a Southern Netherlandish work from the second half of the fifteenth century.1A. Pit, Catalogus van de beeldhouwwerken in het Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst te Amsterdam, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1904, no. 49; W. Vogelsang and M. van Notten, Die Holzskulptur in den Niederlanden, vol. 2, Berlin/Utrecht 1912, no. 26; A. Pit, Catalogus van de beeldhouwwerken in het Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst te Amsterdam, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1915, no. 202. However, the small size, St Anne’s stiff posture and the thickset, rather hard design of the piece as a whole led Leeuwenberg to place the group in the Northern Netherlands, more specifically in the County of Holland, and to date it to the early sixteenth century.2J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, p. 80. The mischievous action of the grasping Christ can be regarded as a further indication of a Northern Netherlandish origin.3Cf. D.P.R.A. Bouvy, Kerkelijke kunst, vol. 2, Bussum 1966, p. 36. A piece that makes the difference from the woodcarving of the Southern Netherlands evident at a glance, is a contemporaneous Virgin and Child with St Anne in Museum Mayer van den Bergh, which is similar in construction, but larger and more refined.4J. de Coo (ed.), Catalogus 2. Beeldhouwkunst, plaketten, antiek, coll. cat. Antwerp (Museum Mayer van den Bergh) 1969, no. 2260. Here the infant Christ holds out his hand to his grandmother with restraint. It is also striking that the St Anne in this Brussels group is depicted at a considerably younger age. This would become increasingly common in the South as the sixteenth century progressed.

Stylistically the group in the Rijksmuseum can be best compared to two Utrecht versions of the Virgin and Child with St Anne in Museum Catharijneconvent. They even show a nearly identical composition to the group in the Rijksmuseum, but in mirror image.5Inv. nos. ABM bh340 and ABM bh339, see M. van Vlierden et al., Hout- en steensculptuur van Museum Catharijneconvent ca. 1200-1600, coll. cat. Utrecht 2004, pp. 225-26; H.L.M. Defoer in M. Leeflang et al., Middeleeuwse beelden uit Utrecht: 1430-1530/Mittelalterliche Bildwerke aus Utrecht: 1430-1530, exh. cat. Utrecht (Museum Catharijneconvent)/Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum) 2012-13, p. 75, no. 45 and fig. on p. 263. Compositions of this group with high-backed thrones are regarded as typical of Utrecht work. It is not possible to ascertain how high the back of the Rijksmuseum example originally was because the protruding part has been sawn off, but the great affinity with the two Utrecht groups is a strong indication it was also made in this city. Defoer places the two sculptures of St Anne Trinity in Museum Catharijneconvent in a group of Utrecht carvings of a rather conservative style, made up of a small devotional relief of the Nativity, an retable group of the Adoration, all in Museum Catharijneconvent, and a Flight into Egypt in the Rijksmuseum (BK-NM-11769).6H.L.M. Defoer in M. Leeflang et al., Middeleeuwse beelden uit Utrecht: 1430-1530/Mittelalterliche Bildwerke aus Utrecht: 1430-1530, exh. cat. Utrecht (Museum Catharijneconvent)/Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum) 2012-13, p. 75, nos. 43-46. The nearly identical facial type of the Virgin in the Adoration and the same figure in the present carving confirms the latter belongs to this Utrecht style group as well.

Bieke van der Mark, 2024


Literature

J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no. 49, with earlier literature


Citation

B. van der Mark, 2024, ' or anonymous, The Virgin and Child with St Anne, Northern Netherlands, c. 1500 - c. 1525', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20035553

(accessed 13 December 2025 22:42:08).

Footnotes

  • 1A. Pit, Catalogus van de beeldhouwwerken in het Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst te Amsterdam, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1904, no. 49; W. Vogelsang and M. van Notten, Die Holzskulptur in den Niederlanden, vol. 2, Berlin/Utrecht 1912, no. 26; A. Pit, Catalogus van de beeldhouwwerken in het Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst te Amsterdam, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1915, no. 202.
  • 2J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, p. 80.
  • 3Cf. D.P.R.A. Bouvy, Kerkelijke kunst, vol. 2, Bussum 1966, p. 36.
  • 4J. de Coo (ed.), Catalogus 2. Beeldhouwkunst, plaketten, antiek, coll. cat. Antwerp (Museum Mayer van den Bergh) 1969, no. 2260.
  • 5Inv. nos. ABM bh340 and ABM bh339, see M. van Vlierden et al., Hout- en steensculptuur van Museum Catharijneconvent ca. 1200-1600, coll. cat. Utrecht 2004, pp. 225-26; H.L.M. Defoer in M. Leeflang et al., Middeleeuwse beelden uit Utrecht: 1430-1530/Mittelalterliche Bildwerke aus Utrecht: 1430-1530, exh. cat. Utrecht (Museum Catharijneconvent)/Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum) 2012-13, p. 75, no. 45 and fig. on p. 263.
  • 6H.L.M. Defoer in M. Leeflang et al., Middeleeuwse beelden uit Utrecht: 1430-1530/Mittelalterliche Bildwerke aus Utrecht: 1430-1530, exh. cat. Utrecht (Museum Catharijneconvent)/Aachen (Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum) 2012-13, p. 75, nos. 43-46.