What does the Madonna of Chancellor Rolin represent?

What does the Madonna of Chancellor Rolin represent?

Backstory: This painting is also known as The Virgin with Chancellor Rolin or The Virgin of Chancellor Rolin. The flowers in the middle symbolize different virtues of Mary. Behind the praying hands of Rolin is a church tower to symbolize his faith. The church towers behind Jesus signify him as the center of the Church.

Who painted the Madonna of Chancellor Rolin?

Jan van Eyck
Madonna of Chancellor Rolin/Artists

The Madonna of Chancellor Rolin is an oil painting by the Early Netherlandish master Jan van Eyck, dating from around 1435.

Where is the portrait of Margaret Van Eyck?

the National Gallery
It is thought to be a pendant panel to Jan van Eyck’s likely self-portrait now in the National Gallery in London.

Where was the Madonna of Chancellor Rolin made?

Madonna and Chancellor Rolin was in the Notre Dame du Chastel church in Autun until 1793 when it burned down. It was then moved to Autun Cathedral for a short period of time before moving permanently to the Louvre in 1805.

What is the style of Jan van Eyck’s Madonna and Child with the Chancellor Rolin?

The architecture of the loggia, as in so many of van Eyck’s paintings, is in a rich and delicate Romanesque style far from the Gothic styles of his own day. All these details are on Rolin’s side of the painting; no equivalents are visible on the other, divine, side.

When was the portrait of Margaret van Eyck painted?

1439
Jan van Eyck’s celebrated portrait of his wife, Margaret, was painted in 1439 when she was aged 33. It was lent to the National Gallery, London by the Groeningemuseum, Bruges for the Renaissance Faces exhibition (15 October 2008 – 18 January 2009).

What is happening in the Madonna of Chancellor Rolin?

Description. The scene depicts the Virgin Mary crowned by a hovering Angel while she presents the Infants Jesus to Rolin. It is set within a spacious loggia with a rich decoration of columns and bas-reliefs.