Title
The Annunciation. Fragment of an altarpiece
Bigarny, Felipe [style of] (Langres, Borgoña, ca. 1473 - Toledo, 1542)
Generic classification
SculptureObject
ReliefDate
ca. 1515-1530Century
First quarter of the 16th c.Cultural context / style
RenaissanceDimensions
49 x 35 1/2 inMaterial
WoodIconography / Theme
AnunciaciónProvenance
Possible origin in the province of Burgos (Burgos, Spain)Current location
Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Museum of Art, Indiana University (Bloomington, United States)Inventory Number in Current Collection
65.112Object history
This relief was part of an altarpiece that no longer exists. Nine panels from the ensemble have been located, eight of them in the Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Art Museum (Indiana University, USA) and one in Hearst Castle (San Simeon, California, USA). The scenes preserved from the set at the Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Art Museum are as follows: Annunciation, Birth of Christ, Birth of the Virgin, Betrothal of the Virgin, Visitation, Adoration of the Magi, Presentation of Christ in the Temple and Flight into Egypt. For its part, in Hearst Castle there is a relief with the Presentation of the Virgin in the Temple (Stratton, 1994; Merino de Cáceres and Martínez Ruiz, 2012).
In addition, according to information provided by Caleigh Law, assistant to the Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Art Museum, there is a sculpture of the Assumption of Mary in the Loyola University Museum of Art (Chicago, United States) that would also be part of the altarpiece. This piece was attributed to the circle of Philip Bigarny by Stratton (1994).
Although the reliefs have been attributed to Philip Bigarny because of their formal characteristics, we do not consider this hypothesis to be correct. Although we do not have documentation in this regard, we are inclined to think that they come from Burgos due to the style and way of working the figures, as well as their polychromy. Be that as it may, we cannot determine the exact origin of this work nor the moment in which it left the country. We have news that Pedro Ruiz, an antique dealer established in Alava, sold the relief of the Presentation of the Virgin in the Temple that is currently located in Hearst Castle at the beginning of the 20th century. Could this antique dealer have been responsible for the sale and export of the whole set?
In the second third of the 20th century these eight reliefs were in the private collection of William Armstrong Fairburn, in Morristown (New Jersey, United States). Subsequently, after his death, the assets were dispersed, being sold in 1962 by Savoy Art & Auction Galleries (New York, United States). That same year they were acquired by Edward R. Lubin, an antique dealer residing in Manhattan (New York, United States). Finally, James S. Adams bought the eight reliefs in memory of his wife, Marvelle Warne Adams, and gave them to the Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Art Museum, where they are currently housed.
Description
This relief represents the Annunciation, the moment in which the archangel Gabriel announces to Mary that she is going to be a mother. The Virgin, visibly troubled, is kneeling holding the page of a book with one hand and with the other resting on her chest. The scene is set in a bourgeois room where the canopied bed in the right corner of the relief stands out. In the background, an opening through which the Holy Spirit enters in the form of a dove allows a view of the landscape. The monumentality of the figures, as well as the polychromy of the same ones refers to the Castilian environment, specifically to Burgos.
Locations
XVIth c.
ca. 1962
private collection
William Armstrong Fairburn, Morristown (United States) *
ca. 1962
1962 - 1965
dealer/antiquarian
Edward R. Lubin, New York (United States) *
ca. 1965 - present
Bibliography
- BREWER, Nanette; ISTRABADI, Juliet; MCCOMAS, Jennifer, PELRINE, Diane y STUBBS, Judith (2016): Indiana University Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Museum of Art: guide to the collection, Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Museum of Art, Bloomington, p. 198.
- MERINO DE CÁCERES, José Miguel y MARTÍNEZ RUIZ, María José (2012): La destrucción del patrimonio artístico español. W. R. Hearst “el gran acaparador", Cátedra, Madrid, pp. 546-547.
- STRATTON, Suzanne (1994): Spanish Polychrome Sculpture 1500-1800 in U. S. Collections, University of Washington Press, Washington, p. 160.
Record manager
Isabel Escalera FernándezCitation:
Isabel Escalera Fernández, "The Annunciation. Fragment of an altarpiece" in Nostra et Mundi. Cultural Heritage from Castile and Leon around the world, Fundación Castilla y León, 2025. https://inventario.nostraetmundi.com/en/work/431