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Lavinia Fontana, Holy Family with Saints Margaret
and Francis, 1578
In her Holy Family with Saints, Lavinia Fontana presents the Madonna
in an intimate domestic scene. Mary tenderly places the infant
Christ in a cradle as Joseph stands behind her; opposite them,
Saints Margaret and Francis bow their heads in worship. At first
glance, the painting appears to celebrate both Christ’s divine
birth and the human joy of motherhood, yet its iconographical elements
speak also of Christ’s death.
Fontana is widely considered
to be the first professional woman artist, as she received numerous
commissions for portraits and
large-scale religious paintings and actually supported her family
by her work (May, pp. 44-45). She painted the Holy Family just
as her career was beginning to flourish. As an assertion of her
arrival as an artist, the painting prominently bears her signature
and the date: LAVINIA FONTANA DE ZAPPIS FACIEBAT MDLXXVIII. This
signature not only allows us to date the painting with ease but
also reveals something of the confidence of the artist, who signs
her work like a master so early in her career. Unknown to Italian
scholars before the 1990s, this painting has gained prominence
in two recent exhibitions (Noone; Fortunati). Like other artists of her period, Fontana responds to the artistic
decrees of the Counter-Reformation by turning away from the excesses
of the Mannerist style in which she had been trained. Instead,
she uses linear perspective and foreshortening to create a realistic
sense of spatial recession that clearly defines the setting. In
addition, she gives her figures the modest dress and pious decorum
that are appropriate to the painting’s religious subject
matter. By creating a balanced, nearly symmetrical composition
with strong upward diagonals, she emphasizes the centrality of
Christ to the devotional image. The linking of her figures by gazes
and graceful gestures shows that, like other Bolognese artists,
she was influenced by the work of the High Renaissance artist Correggio
(DeGrazia). In order to succeed as a woman artist in a male-dominated
art world, Fontana had to adhere scrupulously to the newly defined
doctrines of the Church that arose out of the 1545-1563 Ecumenical
Council of Trent (Fortunati, p. 13).
The artistic verisimilitude of the painting would have made
its iconography all the easier for contemporary viewers to read.
Saint
Margaret is recognizable by her attribute, the dragon that accompanies
her. According to legend, she became the patron saint of women
in childbirth after using her cross to deliver herself unharmed
from the belly of the dragon that had swallowed her as a test of
her Christian faith; she then asked women to call upon her for
the safe delivery of their children. Bathed in a beatific light,
Mary and Saint Margaret are fully absorbed in the present moment,
worshipping and caring for the child who raises his plump hand
in a babyish sign of blessing. Standing in shadowy gloom, the male
saints appear unaware of the scene of maternal bliss before them.
Somberly contemplating the crucifix, they are occupied not with
the present, the infant Christ, but with his coming death on the
cross. To emphasize the point, Saint Francis reveals the stigmata
on his hands, miraculous signs of his communion with Christ’s
suffering. Yet the light and dark areas of the painting do not
create an absolute division between present and future concerns.
Saint Francis is associated with Christ’s birth: credited
with creating the first Nativity scene in an Italian grotto in
the thirteenth century, he cradles the tiny crucifix in his arm
like a mother holding a child. Mary on the other hand, does not
cradle the child near her but places him in a sarcophagus-like
crib on a sacrificial altar table. She lifts his body like a priest
raising the Host—the transubstantiated body of Christ—in
the celebration of the holy Eucharist.
Fontana’s inextricable
merging of these signs of the birth, death, and resurrection of
Christ may reflect her contemplation
of the recent birth and subsequent death of her own first-born
child in the year before she painted the Holy Family (Cheney 1984,
1998). As she depicts this theme of great personal significance,
Fontana also establishes a connection between the divine and earthly
planes: a holy subject takes on the real, everyday quality of a
domestic scene, while an everyday scene of motherhood is lifted
to a sacred level.
Margaret A. Samu, DS '01
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