Saint Margaret and the Dragon is the title shared by two paintings of Saint Margaret by the Renaissance painter Raphael, both executed in about 1518. One is held in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, the other in the Louvre in Paris.[1]
Vienna version
editThe painting shows the saint at the moment before she is swallowed alive by the dragon. She is shown unafraid, holding the crucifix that will save her once she is swallowed.
Theatrum Pictorium
editThis painting was documented in David Teniers the Younger's catalog Theatrum Pictorium of the art collection of Archduke Leopold Wilhelm in 1659 and again in 1673,[2] but the portrait had already enjoyed notoriety in Teniers' portrayals of the Archduke's art collection.
Paris version
editAnother version showing the central figure holding a palm branch is in the collection of the Louvre.
Gallery
edit-
Copy by Teniers after the Vienna version in the Kelvingrove Art Gallery, Glasgow
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Engraving from Teniers' catalog by Jan van Troyen, 1673
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Archduke Leopold Wilhelm in his Art Gallery in Brussels, 1650s
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Engraving after the Louvre version by Nicolas Bazin, 1690
See also
editNotes
editReferences
edit- khm (2016). "Kunsthistorisches Museum Bilddatenbank". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04.
- Teniers (1673). "Davidis Teniers Antverpiensis, pictoris, et a cubiculis ser.mis principibus Leopoldo Guil. archiduci et Ioanni Austriaco, Theatrum pictorium : in quo exhibentur ipsius manu delineatae, eiusque curâ in aes incisae picturae, archetipae italicae, quas ipse ser.mus archidux in pinacothecam suam Bruxellis collegit".
External links
edit- Media related to Saint Margaret by Raphael - Kunsthistorisches Museum and copy by David Teniers II at Wikimedia Commons