Imaculada Conceição (Inmaculada Concepción) - Peter Paul Rubens
Museu do Prado Madri Espanha
OST - 198x135 - 1628-1629
Wearing a red tunic, blue robes and a crown of stars,
the Virgin treads on a serpent carrying the apple of Sin, in keeping with the
customary iconography for this Catholic image. By placing Mary over a globe, Rubens made one of his most striking images of the Immaculate
Conception. The two angels
carrying a palm and a laurel-leaf crown are a classic reference to Mary´s
triumph. References to Classical culture were customary in Rubens, and are strengthened here by the choice of a model based on
sculptures of Antiquity. This work was made in 1628, when Rubens was in Spain. It reflects the characteristics of his mature style,
combining the Baroque dynamism of the figures with the ideal of beauty
reflected in the Virgin´s face. It was painted for the Marquis of Leganés, who
gave it to Felipe
IV. The latter sent
it to the Monastery of El
Escorial, where it was long
thought to be by Erasmus Quellinus. From there, it entered the Prado
Museum in 1837.


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