A Byzantine Madonna in Italy
June 12, 2014
By Ellen Prokop, Digital Art History Lead

The third and final entry in a series of blog posts focusing on conservation "interventions" as recorded in the holdings of the Frick Art Reference Library Photoarchive is this mysterious Madonna and Child in the church of San Martino in Velletri, Italy, a small town about twenty-five miles southeast of Rome. According to legend, this was one of several miraculous images executed by St. Luke during his visions of the Virgin and Child. According to art historians, it was probably painted in the late thirteenth century by an unknown artist of the Italo-Byzantine School, although precise identification was hindered by extensive overpainting (see image below). In 1951, after extensive analysis, conservators removed three or four layers of tempera and oil-based paints, determining that only a thin layer of the original paint surface had survived. The revealed figures were more elegant, with slender hands and refined drapery.
For additional information regarding the panel’s history, please consult the reproduction's library record.
Series entries:
First: Art and Fashion
Second: Lost and Found
Third: A Byzantine Madonna in Italy
Attributed to the Italo-Byzantine School (13th century), Madonna and Child, undated (after restoration). Tempera on panel, 34 5/8 x 24 in. San Martino, Velletri
Attributed to the Italo-Byzantine School (13th century), Madonna and Child, undated (before restoration). Oil and tempera on panel, 34 5/8 x 24 in. San Martino, Velletri