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The Virgin and Child with St Anne
anonymous, c. 1510
Op een erchthoekig geprofileerd voetstuk met afgeknotte hoeken staat Anna, die op de rechter arm de zittende Maria met Kind op haar schoot houdt. Anna draagt een sluier, waaraan de kindoek is vastgespeld. Haar mantel, die van voren open hangt, is onder beide armen opgenomen, waardoor haar kleed en ets van het onderkleed zichtbaar zijn, evenals de sandalen. Maria draagt over haar kleed een mantel, die onder de hals is gesloten, het Kind een hemdje.
- Artwork typesculpture
- Object numberBK-NM-5688
- Dimensionsheight 51 cm x width 17 cm x depth 11 cm
- Physical characteristicsoak with polychromy
Identification
Title(s)
The Virgin and Child with St Anne
Object type
Object number
BK-NM-5688
Description
Op een erchthoekig geprofileerd voetstuk met afgeknotte hoeken staat Anna, die op de rechter arm de zittende Maria met Kind op haar schoot houdt. Anna draagt een sluier, waaraan de kindoek is vastgespeld. Haar mantel, die van voren open hangt, is onder beide armen opgenomen, waardoor haar kleed en ets van het onderkleed zichtbaar zijn, evenals de sandalen. Maria draagt over haar kleed een mantel, die onder de hals is gesloten, het Kind een hemdje.
Inscriptions / marks
- inscription, on the reverse: ‘B1726’
- inscription, on the reverse: ‘RM 37’
- inscription, on the front of the socle, in red paint: ‘[ST.] ANN[A]’
Part of catalogue
Creation
Creation
sculptor: anonymous, Westphalia
Dating
c. 1510
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Material and technique
Physical description
oak with polychromy
Dimensions
height 51 cm x width 17 cm x depth 11 cm
This work is about
Subject
Acquisition and rights
Copyright
Provenance
…; sale, The Hague (Venduehuis), 1882, fl. 3, to the Nederlands Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst, The Hague; transferred to the museum, 1885; on loan to the Museum Arnhem, Arnhem, 1953-72
Documentation
Persistent URL
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anonymous
The Virgin and Child with St Anne
Westphalia, c. 1510
Inscriptions
- inscription, on the front of the socle, in red paint:[ST.] ANN[A]
- inscription, on the reverse:RM 37
- inscription, on the reverse:B1726
Technical notes
Carved and polychromed. The reverse is virtually flat.
Condition
The socle has sustained damage due to woodworm infestation. St Anne’s left hand is missing. A lock of hair on the Christ Child is entirely abraded. The (later) polychromy layer has partly chipped off.
Provenance
…; sale, The Hague (Venduehuis), 1882, fl. 3, to the Nederlands Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst, The Hague; transferred to the museum, 1885; on loan to the Museum Arnhem, Arnhem, 1953-72
Object number: BK-NM-5688
Entry
St Anne was highly venerated in the late Middle Ages, as also reflected in the artistic production of this period.1For the veneration of St Anne in the Low Countries, see T. Brandenburg et al., Heilige Anna, grote moeder: De cultus van de Heilige Moeder Anna en haar familie in de Nederlanden en aangrenzende streken, exh. cat. Uden (Museum voor Religieuze Kunst) 1992. Exceptionally popular were carved images of Anna Selbdritt, as its name implies a composition comprising three figures: the Christ Child, his grandmother St Anne, and his mother, the Virgin Mary. This iconographic type formed as it were a succinct manifestation of Christ’s lineage on his mother’s side, as well as an implicit visualisation of the theology of the Immaculate Conception. In the earliest of these groups, Mary was typically portrayed as a miniature-sized woman held in the arms or sitting at the feet of her mother, St Anne. From about 1470, however, this unnatural disproportion between mother and daughter was generally abandoned in favour of an iconography increasingly situated in the sphere of everyday life, as masterfully displayed in the Master of Joachim and Anne’s (active c. 1460-c. 1480) interpretation of this theme (BK-NM-8974).
Although dated circa 1510 on the basis of criteria such as the arrangement of the drapery folds, the group discussed here remains true to the traditional model. This model remained quite common in Brabant long after 1500, particularly in the form of the fairly conservative devotional statuettes produced in Mechelen (cf. (BK-NM-1280). Even the polygonal form of the profiled base quite clearly matches the socles on these poupées de Malines (cf. BK-NM-2491). While an element of Brabantine influence can certainly be discerned in the Amsterdam group, the style of this much heavier work is more akin to Westphalian woodcarving. St Anne’s broad physiognomic type and her vacant facial expression are more closely aligned with those of the St Anne and Mary in another Westphalian St Anne Trinity in the Rijksmuseum’s collection (BK-NM-2535).
Bieke van der Mark, 2024
Literature
J. Leeuwenberg with the assistance of W. Halsema-Kubes, Beeldhouwkunst in het Rijksmuseum, coll. cat. Amsterdam 1973, no. 126
Citation
B. van der Mark, 2024, 'anonymous, The Virgin and Child with St Anne, Westphalia, c. 1510', in F. Scholten and B. van der Mark (eds.), European Sculpture in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: https://data.rijksmuseum.nl/20035599
(accessed 19 December 2025 22:36:16).Footnotes
- 1For the veneration of St Anne in the Low Countries, see T. Brandenburg et al., Heilige Anna, grote moeder: De cultus van de Heilige Moeder Anna en haar familie in de Nederlanden en aangrenzende streken, exh. cat. Uden (Museum voor Religieuze Kunst) 1992.