Tuesday, September 3, 2019
The Sistine Madonna in the Royal Gallery at Dresden, Saxony Essay
The Sistine Madonna in the Royal Gallery at Dresden, Saxony    The most beautiful picture in the world is the Sistine Madonna in the  Royal Gallery at Dresden, Saxony. It was painted by Raphael as an  altar-piece for a church in Piacenza, Italy. In a far corner of the  great Palace of Art it is now placed, probably to remain until the  colors shall fade. It is the only picture in the room. The figures are  of life size. When that room is entered all voices are hushed, and all  merriment silenced. The place is as holy as a church.    In the centre of the canvas is the Virgin Mother with a young, almost  girlish face or surpassing loveliness. In her eyes affection and  wonder are blended, and the features and the figure are the most  spiritual and beautiful in the world's art.    I have wondered where Raphael found that face. It is not voluptuous  like the Italian, nor heavy like the German, nor light like the  French, nor cold like the women of more northern nations. It is the  ideal woman's face for all nations and ages, and yet it is typical of  none.    In the Mother's arms is the Divine Child, with those strange,  far-away-looking eyes that casual visitors so little understandââ¬âeyes  that even in babyhood seem reading the future, and beginning to see  the greatness of the world's sorrow. Kneeling on one side, below them,  is St. Sixtus, the nearest perfect of all pictures of strong and  venerable age that was ever painted; on the other side Santa Barbara,  only less beautif...                      
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