Holy Family
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Join Britannica's Publishing Partner Program and our community of experts to gain a global audience for your work!Holy Family, as a theme in Christian art, representation of the infant Jesus with his immediate family. There are two major versions, one showing the Virgin and Child with St. Joseph and the other showing the Virgin and Child with the Virgin’s mother, St. Anne. Like a number of other themes dealing with the lives of Christ and the Virgin, the Holy Family gained importance at the end of the Middle Ages as an inspiration to popular piety through contemplation of the emotional aspects of the Gospel story. It was most frequently depicted in painting and, especially in the Renaissance, was a favourite subject for altarpieces.
The Holy Family with St. Anne was the version most popular in Germany, where it first appeared in the 14th century and was widely represented in the 15th; in the 15th and 16th centuries it was also frequently depicted in Italy and Spain. It has two forms: St. Anne holding both Virgin and Child on her lap and the Child seated on the ground between the two women. In addition to its sentimental significance, the Holy Family with St. Anne also dramatized the recently formulated doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, which held that Mary was, from the first instant of her conception by her mother, free from original sin.
The Holy Family with St. Joseph, which grew out of the intimate Western version of the theme of the Nativity (q.v.), was current in all areas of western Europe from the 14th through the 17th century. In the 16th and 17th centuries it was often augmented by the figures of the infant St. John the Baptist and his mother, Elizabeth, the Virgin’s cousin. The simpler version of the Holy Family with St. Joseph, however, was particularly important in the art of Roman Catholic countries from the late 16th century on, since it illustrated the Counter-Reformation concept of the “terrestrial trinity,” which held that Joseph, Jesus, and Mary were an earthly reflection of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. In France, Spain, and Flanders in the 17th century the theme of the “two trinities”—combining both groups, earthly and celestial, in one work—was frequently represented.
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Christology: The Middle Ages through the 19th century…Annunciation, the flight of the Holy Family into Egypt, and scenes from Jesus’ public ministry, such as his healing of the blind man, his raising of Lazarus, his driving the traders from the Temple, the Last Supper, and the women at the Holy Sepulchre.…
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Michelangelo: Early life and works…and immobile, the painting (
Holy Family ) and one of the reliefs (Madonna and Child with the Infant St. John ) are full of motion; they show arms and legs of figures interweaving in actions that imply movement through time. The forms carry symbolic references to Christ’s future death, common in… -
Nicolas Poussin: The final years…of these works depict the Holy Family, a purely contemplative theme ideally suited to the serenity of his art during that phase. Yet he also executed more dramatic history paintings, certain of which are overtly inspired by the work of Raphael. By that stage of his career the artist’s work…