The Virgin of Sorrows; central part of a print with nine surounding compartments, now separated

The Virgin of Sorrows; central part of a print with nine surounding compartments, now separated by Giorgio Ghisi

Medium

Engraving

Dimensions

Sheet: 8 3/8 × 4 7/16 in. (21.2 × 11.2 cm)

Classification

Prints

Department

Drawings and Prints

Museum

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY

Credit

Harris Brisbane Dick Fund, 1953

Accession Number

53.600.3486

Tags

Virgin MarySadness

Art Historical Context

Behold *The Virgin of Sorrows a poignant central engraving by the masterful Italian printmaker Giorgio Ghisi, by 1575. This intimate sheet, measuring just 8 3/8 × 4 7/16 inches, captures the Virgin Mary in profound grief—known as the Mater Dolorosa—her face etched with sorrow amid the Seven Sorrows of Mary, a core theme in Catholic devotion. Originally part of a composition with nine surrounding compartments (now separated), it exemplifies the modular design popular in devotional prints of the era. Ghisi, a leading engraver of the 16th century from Mantua, was renowned for his precise, fluid ...

About the Artist

Giorgio Ghisi · 15201582

Giorgio Ghisi (c. 1520–1582) was one of the most accomplished engravers of the Italian Renaissance, renowned for translating the monumental compositions of Raphael, Giulio Romano, and Michelangelo into the exacting medium of the burin. Born in Mantua, he trained in an environment shaped by the legacy of Giulio Romano's decoration of the Palazzo del Te, and the grandeur of that Mannerist tradition ...

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