- Source: The Repentant Magdalene (Cagnacci)
The Repentant Magdalene, also called The Conversion of Mary Magdalene, is an oil painting of the early 1660s by the Baroque Italian painter Guido Cagnacci. It shows Mary Magdalene, beside her remonstrating sister Martha, at the moment she repents, echoed by an allegorical pairing of Virtue, an angel, chasing out Vice, a devil. The painting is at the collection of the Norton Simon Museum, in Pasadena.
Provenance
The painting's owners have been:
Dukes of Mantua by 1665, Duke Carlo II, villa Marmirolo and villa Favorita
Duke Ferdinand Carlo Gonzaga, 10th and last Duke of Mantua in 1706, transported to Venice 1707; upon his death, transported 5 July 1708 to Padua, (sale, Venice, 1711, )
purchased by Christian Cole, and transported to England in April, 1711
Henry Bentinck (1st Duke of Portland by 1716), Bulstrode House; Harcourt House by 1854
Dukes of Portland, Welbeck Abbey and London
by descent to Lady Anne Bentinck, Welbeck Abbey (sold at Christie's, London, 11 December 1981, lot 52)
P.D. Colnaghi & Co., London
Norton Simon Art Foundation
See also
Penitent Magdalene (Caravaggio)
Penitent Magdalene (Titian, 1565)
References
External links
"The Repentant Magdalene". Norton Simon Museum. Retrieved 21 August 2022.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- The Repentant Magdalene (Cagnacci)
- Penitent Magdalene
- Guido Cagnacci
- The Conversion of Mary Magdalene
- List of works by Guido Cagnacci
- The Rape of Lucretia (Ficherelli)
- List of works by El Greco
- List of paintings by Rembrandt
- List of works by Francisco Goya
- List of paintings by Anthony van Dyck