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Collection Details
One of the set of four lunettes commissioned before 1665 by Murillos
friend, Canon Justino de Neve, for the church of Santa María la
Blanca in Seville, which was finished in 1665 and for which he was prebendary.
All four were removed during the Spanish War of Independence (180814)
and taken as war booty to France by Marshal Soult. The two larger ones
were intended for the Musée Napoléon in Paris or the proposed
museum in Madrid, and were in 1814 on exhibition in Paris (cf Notice des
Tableaux exposés
Musée Royal, Paris, 1814, p. 73,
Nos 83, 84). After the Peace, these two pictures were returned to Spain
(see below); of the remaining two, the Immaculate Conception, which is
now in the Louvre, is said to have been bought by Louis XVIII in 1817
from a M. Lom; and the Triumph, which appears to have passed to General
Faviers, later entered the Pourtalès collection; Comte de Pourtalès
sale, Paris, 27 March 1865, lot 199; Mrs Lyne Stephens by 1891; her sale,
Christies, 11 May 1895, lot 324: bt by Agnew, who sold it to Alexander
Henderson, 1st Lord Faringdon, the same year; included in the latters
sale, Sothebys, 13 June 1934, lot 146, repd, when it was bought
back by Lord Faringdon.
Literature
Torre Farfán, Fiestás que celebro la Iglésia de S.
M. la Blanca, 1666; A Ponz, Viaje de España, 1785, IX (1947 edn,
p. 783); D J A Céan Bermúdez, Diccionario Historico, 1800,
II, pp. 589; F González de Léon Noticia Artistica,
1844, I, pp. 1024; Sir W Stirling-Maxwell, Annals of the Artists
in Spain, 1848, II, pp. 8446; C B Curtis, Velasquez and Murillo,
1883, p. 207, No. 231; A L Mayer, Murillo (Klassiker der Kunst), 1913,
1923, p. XI; idem, Ausstellung
Grafton Galleries, Zeitschrift
für Bildende Kunst, N F, 1914, pp. 8, repd, 10, No. 25; G Kubler
and M Soria, Art and Architecture in Spain and Portugal, 1959, p. 274;
Angulo Iñíquez, Las Pinturas de Murillo, de Santa
María la Blanca, Archivo Español de Arte, 165, 1969,
pp. 301, repd pl. 14; Gaya Nuño, Lopera completa di
Murillo, 1978, No. 106; E Young, Die Grosse Meister der Malerei: Bartolomé
Murillo, 1980, No. 110; Angulo Iñíquez, Murillo, 1981, No.
42.
Exhibition Details
RA, Winter, 1891, No. 114; 1896, No. 116;
BFAC, 1908, No. 16; Grafton Galleries, London, Spanish Old Masters, 1913,
No. 79; RA, Winter, Spanish Painting, 1920, No. 85; Agnew, London, The
17th Century, 1960, No. 17; National Gallery, El Greco to Goya, 1981,
No. 50; Prado and RA, Murillo, 19823, No. 39.
Companion Pictures
The three other pictures belonging to the
series are The Dream of the Roman Patrician (Prado, No. 994); The Roman
Patrician before Pope Liberius (Prado, No. 995); and The Immaculata (Louvre,
No. 1708). These, but not the present picture, are repd by Mayer (op cit,
1913, 1923, pp. 77, 78, 76). The two pictures now in the Prado were placed
originally under the crossing of Santa María la Blanca, while the
Louvre picture and the picture now at Buscot hung nearby in the aisles.
Background
Together, the four pictures celebrate the
Church and the Virgin Mary, and the foundation of S Maria Maggiore in
Rome, the mother church of Santa María la Blanca, through the miraculous
intervention of the Virgin. The legend has it that she appeared in a dream
to both the patrician John and Pope Liberius (35266) to tell them
to build a church in her honour (the only early basilica so dedicated)
on the Esquiline Hill. When they met there the next day (5 August), they
found its plan miraculously marked out by a fall of snow hence
the Virgins title Our Lady of the Snows. That nieve
in Spanish or neve in Portuguese means snow
can hardly have failed to influence de Neves choice of dedication
(St Mary the White) and imagery.
The church was built following Pope Alexander VIIs papal brief of
1661, which reaffirmed the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception, and
particularly extolled Sevilles devotion to this mystery (celebrated
in the Louvre painting). The present picture proclaims the other great
Catholic dogma, that of the Real Presence, or transubstantiation. A figure
with a book and keys (symbols of St Peter, the first Pope),
representing the Church, holds aloft a chalice and host to celebrate the
Eucharist. The dove of the Holy Ghost hovers above (signifying the presence
of God in these), to be adored by Cherubim and the Faithful.
The inscription IN FINEM DILEXIT EOS. Joanis Cap.e XIII (he
loved them unto the end) comes from the first verse of the
chapter in St Johns Gospel in which Christ institutes the Eucharist.
It was by promising his continuing presence in the sacrament at the Last
Supper that he manifested his love for mankind to the end. This inscription
is answered by another in the Louvre picture IN PRINCIPIO DILEXIT
EAM (He loved her from the beginning) identifying the
Virgin with the Church as the source of salvation.
A date of between 1662 and 1665 is usually accepted for the four pictures.
In the latter year, the conversion of the medieval synagogue into a baroque
church was completed, and in the following year Murillos work was
described by Torre Farfán.
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Copyright © The Trustees of the Faringdon
Collection 1999.
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