Virgin and Child thumbnail 1
Virgin and Child thumbnail 2
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Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Sacred Silver & Stained Glass, Room 84, The Whiteley Galleries

Virgin and Child

Window
ca. 1505 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This panel shows the Virgin and Child on the left. On the right a young female figure is shown kneeling, her hands joined in prayer. A saint stands over the girl and steps forward to present her to the Virgin and Child. The saint holds a chalice, which identifies him as St John the Evangelist. The girl is richly dressed in gold brocade with a mantle emblazoned with a Spanish coat of arms, that of León-Castile and Aragón. This, combined with the presence of St John - clearly a patron saint - indicates that she is either Joanna of Castile or one of her daughters.

Joanna was the daughter of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain. She was born in 1479 and married Philip the Fair of the Netherlands in 1496. She is represented in glass, with her husband, at Saint-Gommaire in Lierre, in Brussels Cathedral and at Sainte-Waudru at Mons. In these windows, she kneels in prayer with her patron saint at her side. At Lierre and Mons her daughters are shown behind her.

The figure in the Victoria and Albert Museum panel, however, is no more than a young girl. It is perhaps more likely that she represents Joanna's first daughter, Eleanor, who was born in 1498. She was shown in just this attitude, with St John the Evangelist standing above her and her mother and a younger sister kneeling in front of her, in another window in the church of Notre-Dame de Sablon in Brussels. This window is now lost.



Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • Panel
  • Window
TitleVirgin and Child (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Stained glass
Brief description
Window, stained glass, depicting Joanna of Castile as Infanta, or her daughter Eleanor, presented to the Virgin and Child by St. John; Belgium (Brabant), ca.1505
Physical description
Window, stained glass, depicting the Virgin and Child and Joanna of Castile as Infanta, or her daughter Eleanor of Austria, with St. John.
Dimensions
  • Height: 112cm
  • Each side width: 51cm
Object history
Window, stained glass, Joanna of Aragon, as Infanta, presented to the Virgin and Child by St. John. The arched upper part of the window is filled with a canopy, while below within medallions stand the arms of Castile and Leon.
Production
Window, part of a set which depicts Joanna of Castile as Infanta, or her daughter Eleanor, presented to the Virgin and Child by St. John. The arched upper part of the window is filled with a canopy, while below within medallions stand the arms of Castile and Leon.
Subjects depicted
Summary
This panel shows the Virgin and Child on the left. On the right a young female figure is shown kneeling, her hands joined in prayer. A saint stands over the girl and steps forward to present her to the Virgin and Child. The saint holds a chalice, which identifies him as St John the Evangelist. The girl is richly dressed in gold brocade with a mantle emblazoned with a Spanish coat of arms, that of León-Castile and Aragón. This, combined with the presence of St John - clearly a patron saint - indicates that she is either Joanna of Castile or one of her daughters.

Joanna was the daughter of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain. She was born in 1479 and married Philip the Fair of the Netherlands in 1496. She is represented in glass, with her husband, at Saint-Gommaire in Lierre, in Brussels Cathedral and at Sainte-Waudru at Mons. In these windows, she kneels in prayer with her patron saint at her side. At Lierre and Mons her daughters are shown behind her.

The figure in the Victoria and Albert Museum panel, however, is no more than a young girl. It is perhaps more likely that she represents Joanna's first daughter, Eleanor, who was born in 1498. She was shown in just this attitude, with St John the Evangelist standing above her and her mother and a younger sister kneeling in front of her, in another window in the church of Notre-Dame de Sablon in Brussels. This window is now lost.

Associated objects
Bibliographic reference
Williamson, Paul. Medieval and Renaissance Stained Glass in the Victoria and Albert Museum. London, 2003. ISBN 1851774041
Collection
Accession number
293:1, 2-1874

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Record createdNovember 20, 2003
Record URL
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