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Framed Detail Of Two Angels From Sistine Madonna

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This is a framed detail of the famous two winged angels from Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino's Sistine Madonna painting. The framed print is approx 24" x 20". Print is approx 15" x 10". The print was framed in a gold-colored textured Baroque-style frame. The frame is in good, used condition with some wearing. The top has a scratch, (see images) but this would not noticeable when framed art is hung. The back paper is also torn.

A prominent element within the painting, the winged angels beneath Mary are famous in their own right. As early as 1913 Gustav Kobbé declared that "no cherub or group of cherubs is so famous as the two that lean on the altar top indicated at the very bottom of the picture."Heavily marketed, they have been featured in stamps, postcards, T-shirts, socks, and wrapping paper. These cherubim have inspired legends of their own. According to a 1912 article in Fra Magazine, when Raphael was painting the Madonna the children of his model would come in to watch. Struck by their posture as they did, the story goes, he added them to the painting exactly as he saw them. Another story, recounted in 1912's St. Nicholas Magazine, says that Raphael rather was inspired by two children he encountered on the street when he saw them "looking wistfully into the window of a baker's shop."

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Time, Location
01 May 2024
United States
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This is a framed detail of the famous two winged angels from Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino's Sistine Madonna painting. The framed print is approx 24" x 20". Print is approx 15" x 10". The print was framed in a gold-colored textured Baroque-style frame. The frame is in good, used condition with some wearing. The top has a scratch, (see images) but this would not noticeable when framed art is hung. The back paper is also torn.

A prominent element within the painting, the winged angels beneath Mary are famous in their own right. As early as 1913 Gustav Kobbé declared that "no cherub or group of cherubs is so famous as the two that lean on the altar top indicated at the very bottom of the picture."Heavily marketed, they have been featured in stamps, postcards, T-shirts, socks, and wrapping paper. These cherubim have inspired legends of their own. According to a 1912 article in Fra Magazine, when Raphael was painting the Madonna the children of his model would come in to watch. Struck by their posture as they did, the story goes, he added them to the painting exactly as he saw them. Another story, recounted in 1912's St. Nicholas Magazine, says that Raphael rather was inspired by two children he encountered on the street when he saw them "looking wistfully into the window of a baker's shop."

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Time, Location
01 May 2024
United States
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