Word: madonnas
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...matter of fact that Andrew Mellon bought Raphael's famed Alba Madonna from the Russian government in 1931, that he paid a whopping $1,166,400 for the picture, and that it now hangs in Washington's Mellonrbuilt National Gallery. So why on earth should the Reds claim they still have the painting? That question, raised in last week's Art News magazine, put critics in a whirl. It need not have...
...source of Art News's story was Voks Bulletin, a Communist "cultural relations" magazine published in Moscow. What Voks Bulletin actually said was that Leningrad's Hermitage collection includes two Raphaels-The Holy Family and the Conestabile Madonna* which is true. Voks blunderingly illustrated the story with Mellon's Madonna, mislabeled it The Holy Family. People have been sent to Siberia for less...
Along with these news subjects, we have had cover stories which discussed the way in which artists through the ages have depicted the real news of Christmas, the birth of Christ. There was Gerard David's painting of The Nativity in 1945 and, two years later, the Madonna and Child by Renaissance Painter Alesso Baldovinetti...
...impulse is wide as well as deep. One of the most interesting exhibitions of 1950 was the Vatican's assembly of art drawn from 600 mission centers around the world. Among the finest sculptures in the show (TIME, Aug. 14) were sere oriental Madonnas from Korea and India, a dark Madonna and Child from Africa. But among the moderns of Europe and the U.S., a preoccupation with the Christian theme is still the rare exception; the main streams and the main schools follow other and worldlier concerns. Even among the exceptions it is hard to find anything with...
...painting in question was a Madonna miniature done by Raphael in 1501, when he was just 18. Its owner, Professor Tullio Gramantieri, had refused as much as $75,000 for it. Then, 2½ years ago, it was stolen from the professor's apartment. Until last week, Rome's police were stymied...