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Depictions of the nativity in artistic works


The Birth of Jesus in Art: 20 Gorgeous Paintings of the Nativity, Magi, and Shepherds

The Birth of Jesus in Art: 20 Gorgeous Paintings of the Nativity, Magi, and Shepherds

To a hole in the world crept peasants and presidents seeking the most irrational and wonderful myth since the Creation; God becoming one with His handiwork, inserting Himself into all its glory and brokenness. This moment that sparked the rebellion of the greatest angels before time even began (according to Duns Scotus) was now ignored or unknown by the majority of the world, despite a people’s entire legacy of preparation.

For a moment in time, Heaven appeared under the Earth and the sky stood in bright witness. A simple stable where angels rubbed shoulders with Magi and jostled with shepherds became the Cave of Wonders, filled with light, peace and silence.

In celebration of this celestial cavern, we bring you a selection of twenty paintings by the masters for your enjoyment and meditation.

1. The Adoration of the Kings from the Monforte Altarpiece (c. 1470) is an oil on oak panel painting of the Adoration of the Magi by the Flemish painter Hugo van der Goes, now in the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin, Germany. Van der Goes was a Flemish painter and one of the most important of the Early Netherlandish painters.

2. The Adoration of the Shepherds also by Hugo van der Goes

3. Adoration of the Kings , by Abraham Bloemaert, a Dutch painter and printmaker in etching and engraving. He was one of the “Haarlem Mannerists” from about 1585.

4. Adoration of the Kings by Giuseppe Chiari (1564-1727), an Italian painter of the late-Baroque period, active mostly in Rome.

5. Adoration of the Kings by Gerard de Laresse (1641-1711), a Dutch Golden Age painter and art theorist.

6. Adoration of the Kings by Master of Perea

7. Adoration of the Kings by Joseph Adam Ritter von Mölk ( 1718-1794 ), an Austrian frescoes and panel painter.

8. Adoration of the Magi by Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640), a Flemish Baroque painter and proponent of an extravagant Baroque style that emphasized movement and color.

9. Adoration of the Magi by Peter Paul Rubens

10. Adoration of the Magi by Jean Jouvenet (1644-1717), a French painter specializing in religious subjects.

11. Adoration of the Shepherds by Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich (1712 – April 23, 1774), a German painter and art administrator.

12. Adoration of the Shepherds Bernardo Cavallino (1616–1656), an Italian painter of the Baroque period, working in Naples.

13. Adoration of the Shepherds by Jacob van Oost (1603–1671), a Flemish Baroque painter of history paintings and portraits.

14. The Nativity by Jean Charles Frontier (1701-1763), a French painter famous for his religious and mythological paintings.

15. Adoration of the Shepherds by Philippe de Champaigne ( 1602–1674), a Brabançon-born French Baroque era painter, a major exponent of the French school.

16. Adoration of the Shepherds by François Boucher (1703-1770), a French painter in the Rococo style, perhaps the most celebrated painter and decorative artist of the 18th century.

17. Adoration of the Shepherds by Jean Baptiste Marie Pierre ( 1714-1789), a French painter, draughtsman and administrator.

18. Adoration of the Shepherds by Bartolome Esteban Murillo (1617-1682), a Spanish baroque painter, best known for his religious works, as well as realistic depictions of the everyday life of his times.

19. Adoration of the Shepherds by Friar Juan Bautista Maíno (1569 – 1 April 1649), a Spanish painter of the Baroque period.

20. The Nativity by Gerbrand van den Eeckhout (1621-1674), a Dutch Golden Age painter and a favorite student of Rembrandt. He was also an etcher, an amateur poet, a collector and an adviser on art.





The 10 best Christmas story paintings

Early Renaissance

Here is the news, delivered by an angel. The Virgin Mary is pregnant. The son of God is on his way. In this exquisite painting, by a Florentine monk, the split-second of the telling appears to be the very moment of conception itself. Mary listens in astonishment, hands crossed over her body as if receiving a blessing, but also as if protecting the new life there. Her face is a graceful portrait of awe, bewilderment and emotion: the sudden revelation made visible.

2 | The Dream of St Joseph

Philippe de Champaigne, National Gallery, London

Philippe de Champaigne, The Dream of Saint Joseph, c. 1642-3

In the Gospel of Matthew, Mary is pledged in marriage to Joseph when he discovers she is pregnant. In consternation, he decides to continue with the marriage but with future divorce in mind. But God sends an angel to Joseph in a dream to explain the divine conception and ask him to name the baby Jesus. The French painter Champaigne is one of very few artists to depict Joseph’s story, imagining his dilemma and this angelic intervention. And just like a figure in a dream, the angel speaks without words, explaining the mystery entirely in sign language.

3 | Mary and Joseph on the Way to Bethlehem (Portinari Altarpiece)

Hugo van der Goes, Uffizi Gallery, Florence

Hugo van der Goes DETAIL from Portinari Altarpiece

Mary and Joseph are on their way through a rocky landscape. She has climbed down from the donkey, perhaps afraid of riding down such a perilous, ankle-breaking slope. Joseph, grizzled and weary, is helping her along with all his loving kindness, his actions (rather than her physical appearance) suggesting just how pregnant she is. Jesus’s earthly father is generally portrayed as ineffectual but not in this vision, a detail from the famous Portinari Altarpiece in Florence. He is doing everything he can, as husband and prospective new father, to protect his little family from hardship and danger.

4 | The Census at Bethlehem

Peter Bruegel the Elder, Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, Brussels

Peter Bruegel the Elder

Luke describes the event. “And it came to pass in those days that a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be registered… Joseph went to Bethlehem to be registered with Mary, who was with child.” For Bruegel, the event is contemporary, taking place in his native Belgium in the harshest of winters. Mary and Joseph are just two more poor people trudging through the freezing air to queue for this ruthlessly imposed bureaucracy. The only thing that distinguishes them in the general misery and chaos is the proverbial donkey.

5 | The Nativity

Federico Barrocci, Prado museum, Madrid

The Nativity

Of all the many thousands of nativity scenes in western art, this one is among the most tenderly maternal. Mary kneels humbly before her God, but she is equally full of love for her newborn baby. Mother and child gaze into each other’s eyes and the whole composition emphasises their mutual bond. The art of Barrocci, until recently one of the most overlooked of Italian masters, was especially popular with women in his lifetime and it is not hard to see why from this nativity, in which the radiant child illuminates the exquisitely loving face of Mary.

6 | Annunciation to the Shepherds

Taddeo Gaddi, church of Santa Croce, Florence

Annunciation to the Shepherds

Luke reports that the shepherds were tending their flocks outside Bethlehem when an angel suddenly appeared, announcing that the saviour has just been born in the town. Medieval painter Taddeo Gaddi imagines the scene taking place on a steep hill in the middle of the night. Only one of the shepherds is awake so far, the other hunched like a rock behind him. Sheep and dogs are beginning to stir too, as the angel speaks from above – a shepherd and his flock waking up to the astonishing news.

7 | The Procession of the Magi

Benozo Gozzoli, Medici Riccardi palace, Florence

The Procession of the Magi

Not three kings, so much as 33: a whole cavalcade of the great and good (or the rich and powerful) wends its way down a steep valley on the way to Bethlehem. Gozzoli’s fresco, with its deer, hounds and horses, its hunting and social conversation, could almost have been painted from life; and sure enough these Magi include a throng of Medici godfathers and their hangers-on. (The artist himself is among the portraits.) The image commemorates real events – the annual Epiphany procession in 15th-century Florence – as it tries to make biblical events real for contemporary viewers. It’s the high point of the Magi chapel in Florence.

8 | Adoration of the Magi

Botticelli, Uffizi Gallery, Florence

Adoration of the Magi

More Medici – including Lorenzo and Giuliano, Botticelli’s patrons – appear in varying states of worship before the newborn Christ. The scene is anything but hallowed and hushed. The Medici are not all intent on the baby, whose miraculous birth has taken place in a derelict outhouse of yawning rafters on the brink of collapse. But Botticelli raises the holy family above these queuing Italians and finds a way to bring the ancient past into the present. He shifts the tense by including himself, on the extreme right, fixing you with a pressuring gaze – how deep is your respect, your love?

9 | The Adoration of the Shepherds

Giorgione, National Gallery of Art, Washington

The Adoration of the Shepherds

The mysterious Giorgione left very few works at his premature death, but this one is a masterpiece of contemplation. The elderly Joseph is deep in prayer, Mary holds a pose of silent worship before the Christ child, whose hazy face appears so inward-looking. The shepherds, in their ragged clothes, are speechless and spellbound, but full of love for the baby. They are the first to arrive, the first to understand what they are seeing, before the rest of the crowd arrives. The scene is very close and intimate, against the distant Venetian landscape. Not a sheep in sight. By their humility shall you know the shepherds.

10 | Rest on the Flight to Egypt

Orazio Gentileschi, Birmingham Art Gallery

Rest on the Flight To Egypt

What a scene: bisected by a rough brick wall, dominated by the donkey’s head popping above it, Gentileschi’s Rest is a staggeringly strange composition. Joseph is flat out with exhaustion, his snoring head lolling backwards. The Virgin’s feet are dirty and she is too tired to cradle the hungry baby, who looks furtively in our direction. The holy family are fugitives from murderous Herod and his massacre of the innocents. The nativity scene of a billion Christmas cards is all over now.

Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

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