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Virgin and Child

Bramantino (Bartolomeo Suardi) (Italian (Milanese), about 1465–1530)
about 1485–90

Medium/Technique Oil and tempera on panel
Dimensions 46.0 x 35.2 cm (18 1/8 x 13 7/8 in.)
Credit Line Picture Fund
Accession Number13.2859
CollectionsEurope
ClassificationsPanels
This panel is probably the earliest surviving painting by Bramantino, who trained as a goldsmith and later became an important architect and painter in Milan. The strong linearity of Bramantino's paintings reflects the artist's early experience incising metal surfaces. As his nickname, "little Bramante," suggests, Bramantino also adopted much from the paintings of the great Milanese architect Donato Bramante, including his restless figural contours and the lively lines in the draperies. The fortified brick town and the misty lake seen in the background of this painting are typical of the landscape around Milan.

ProvenanceBy 1913, Percy Moore Turner (dealer; b. 1877 - d. 1950), London [see note 1]. 1913, sold by Levesque et Cie., Paris, to the MFA for $7,732. (Accession Date: November 6, 1913)

NOTES:
[1] As published by Roger Fry, "Bramantino," Burlington Magazine 23, no. 126 (September, 1913): 316-317.