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6.11: The Betrothal of the Virgin

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    The Betrothal of the Virgin

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    Artist: Raphael
    Medium: oil on panel
    Art Historical Time Period: Italian High Renaissance (1504)

    Raphael’s The Betrothal of the Virgin shows the marriage of Mary and Joseph (Jesus’ parents),. The painting was made for a church altar in Italy, where it taught viewers about faith, love, and the holy model of marriage. For Renaissance society, this marriage symbolized divine blessing, purity, and obedience to God’s will, serving as an example for Christian families.

    What was innovative about Raphael’s work was its use of perspective and symmetry. The figures are arranged in a balanced way, with Mary and Joseph at the center exchanging rings. Behind them, a temple rises with perfect linear perspective, leading the viewer’s eye to heaven. This combination of human tenderness and architectural harmony was new in the Renaissance, when artists like Raphael blended religious meaning with advanced techniques of depth and space.

    The influence of this painting can be seen in later Christian art and marriage imagery. Raphael’s depiction of love as both sacred and gentle shaped how future artists represented holy unions. Even in modern culture, wedding ceremonies often echo Raphael’s sense of ritual, beauty, and divine presence, connecting human love with spiritual meaning.

    Vocabulary

    • altar a sacred table in a church used for worship
    • harmony a pleasing balance between different parts

    • linear perspective – a way of creating depth in art using lines that meet at a single point

    Student Authors

    • Ron Conner ’26 and Chris Vicentii ‘27

    References and Image Attribution

    • Bambach, C. C. (2005). Restoring Raphael. In M. Jones (Ed.), The Cambridge companion to Raphael (pp. 139–160). Cambridge University Press.

    • Beck, J. (1976). Raphael. Harry N. Abrams.

    • Pulimood, S. (2023). The Marriage of the Virgin (1504). Encyclopaedia Britannica. 

    • Image: “The Marriage of the Virgin” by Pinacoteca di Brera.  Licensed under Public Domain. Via Wikimedia Commons. Modified from original.

       

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