La Inmaculada Concepción (1661)

Zurbarán, Francisco de (1598-1664)

La Inmaculada Concepción (The Immaculate Conception)
1661
Oil on canvas, 136.5 x 102 cm
Museum of Fine ArtsBudapest

In this figure of a young virgin, radiating purity and sublime humility, Zurbarán embodied the ideal of the Inmaculada, Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception. The barely pubescent girl, holding her arms wide in a gesture of submission, is ready to accept divine grace. Her body is embraced in light, while around her head is a crown of twelve stars, alluding simultaneously to the Old and the New Testament: the twelve patriarchs, the twelve tribes of Israel, and the twelve apostles. She wears a blue gown over her white tunic, the way she appeared at the end of the fifteenth century to Saint Beatrice of Silva, foundress of the Order of the Immaculate Conception. At her feet, the attributes of the Virgin Mary – the City of God, David’s Tower, the Temple of God, the ivory tower, the sailboat, the mirror, the Cedar of Lebanon, the palm tree, the sealed fountain and the enclosed spring – fade in the mist of an imaginary landscape. (MFAB)

Compare:

Zurbarán, Francisco de (1598-1664)
La Inmaculada Concepción
16281630
Museo del PradoMadrid