Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 15

Praying Madonna – oil on copper, Neapolitan school, early 18th century

$668.76
$835.9520% Off
£499.71
£624.6420% Off
€560
€70020% Off
CA$922.46
CA$1,153.0720% Off
A$1,010.52
A$1,263.1520% Off
CHF 531.90
CHF 664.8720% Off
MX$12,060.83
MX$15,076.0420% Off
NOK 6,780.37
NOK 8,475.4620% Off
SEK 6,198.28
SEK 7,747.8520% Off
DKK 4,266.76
DKK 5,333.4520% Off

About the Item

Praying Madonna – oil on copper, Neapolitan school, early 18th century Small devotional oil painting on copper. The oval panel measures around 14 × 11 cm. Entourage de Francesco de Mura Colours are luminous and well preserved. It depicts the classic “Madonna in Prayer” and reflects the Neapolitan shift from Baroque drama to the airy elegance of the Rococo in the early 1700s, showing clear influence from the style of Francesco de Mura. The theme of the Madonna with clasped hands was much loved in Italian painting and found its highest expression in the luminous, enamel‑like colour of Sassoferrato’s seventeenth‑century Madonnas, models that later artists adapted to their own styles. In this small oval, the Virgin is shown at half‑length with her hands joined and eyes downcast. A soft ivory veil frames her youthful face, and a slim golden halo encircles her head. The blue mantle over a rose‑coloured gown and the gentle interplay of blues, pinks and ochres give the scene an intimate radiance, while a draped curtain and architectural fragment provide context without distracting from the devotional focus. The painting belongs to the Neapolitan school and dates to the early 1700s, when baroque naturalism was giving way to the lighter palette of the Rococo. Its colour harmony and tender modelling of the flesh recall the influence of Francesco de Mura, although the execution suggests it was painted by an anonymous artist inspired by his tonal refinements rather than a direct follower. Executed in oil on a copper support—a precious, smooth surface favoured for small private devotionals and traditionally polished with pumice before priming—it has survived in good, stable condition. Minor abrasions along the edges reflect its age, yet the paint layer is firmly attached and the pigments remain vibrant.
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 6.3 in (16 cm)Width: 4.73 in (12 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement Style:
  • Circle Of:
    Francesco de Mura (1696-1782, Italian)
  • Period:
  • Framing:
    Framing Options Available
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    Firenze, IT
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU2464217024452

More From This Seller

View All
Venice. XVI century. Madonna with child with St. John. Attrib. Marco Bello.
Located in Firenze, IT
Sacred Conversation: Madonna with child with St. John with idealized landscape background with mountains. Early XVI century. Oil on wooden panel of Venetian conifers. Marco Bello, attributed. (Venezia, 1470 - 1523, Udine), pupil and follower of Giovanni Bellini. Venetian school. Madonna with child with St. John with idealized landscape background with mountains. Dimentions: 57cm x 68cm x 6cm Beautiful late Renaissance frame...
Category

16th Century Renaissance Figurative Paintings

Materials

Oil, Wood Panel

17th century . Holy Family with the Saint John the Baptist - Bolognese School
Located in Firenze, IT
The Holy Family with the Infant Saint John the Baptist - Bolognese School, 17th century Attribution: Attributable to Francesco Brizio (Bologna, 1574-1623) Medium: Oil on canvas Dimen...
Category

17th Century Italian School Figurative Paintings

Materials

Oil, Canvas

Salvator Mundi, oil on copper, North Italian school, late 16th–early 17th c.
Located in Firenze, IT
Salvator Mundi, oil on copper. North Italian school. Late 16th – early 17th century. 9 x 7 cm Technique: oil on copper. Dimensions: 9cm x 7 cm. North Italian school, within a late-...
Category

Early 17th Century Italian School Portrait Paintings

Materials

Copper

Portrait Of A Noblewoman. Attributed To Carlo Ceresa. About 1640.
By Carlo Ceresa
Located in Firenze, IT
Portrait of a noblewoman. Attributed to Carlo Ceresa. (1609 - 1679, Bergamo) Oil on canvas. Size cm 110x86,5cm with frame Around 1640. This portrait depicts a middle-aged woman with great realism, typical of Lombard and Bergamo painters in particular. Carlo Ceresa, probable author of this unsigned painting, had studied with Daniele Crespi...
Category

Mid-17th Century Baroque Portrait Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Academic Study of young saint Inspired by Perugino, Tuscan School, cm 40x28
Located in Firenze, IT
Head with Halo, Academic Study Inspired by Perugino, Tuscan School, 40 × 28 cm Mid-19th century Pencil on paper Academic drawing depicting a youthful head with a halo and upward gaz...
Category

Mid-19th Century Academic Figurative Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Pencil, Carbon Pencil

Portrait signed Darbes, 1781. Russo-Baltic period, Riga address on the reverse
Located in Firenze, IT
Portrait signed Darbes, 1781. Russo-Baltic period, Riga address on the reverse Oil on canvas, oval format, 61 × 46.5 cm Signed on the left and dated 1781, this portrait is by Joseph...
Category

Late 18th Century Rococo Portrait Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

You May Also Like

Madonna Child Conca 17/18th Century Paint Oil on copper Old master Roman school
Located in Riva del Garda, IT
Sebastiano Conca (Gaeta 1680 – Naples 1764) circle Madonna and Child Oil on copper 26 x 20 cm In high-quality period frame 72 x 50 cm The work depicts the Madonna lovingl...
Category

18th Century Old Masters Paintings

Materials

Oil

Early 17th Century Roman School Praying Madonna Painting Oil on Canvas
Located in Milan, IT
Roman school, late 16th-early 17th century Praying Madonna Oil on canvas, 81 x 69 cm Frame 83 x 95.5 cm A divine whiteness reverberates with vibrant luster on the maphorion of the present Virgin. The palpable iridescence that structures the thin rosaceous garment, woven with the same fresh light, produces a slight rustle when she takes her hands off. The Madonna in fact takes a prayerful pose, opening her palms to underline her fervent ecstatic intention; the white neck is rendered with perishable fullness of pigments, like the hands, perfectly alive, and the very shiny eyes. With fine shrewdness the artist of the present styles the Virgin's hair with thin white ribbons, exacerbating the purity. An evocative light falls gently on the bust, a materialized sign of divine glory. The present can be traced back to the late Mannerist climate that prevailed in the capital after the emanation of the Tridentine council (1545-1563). The late Mannerist licenses that can still be seen there, such as the intense lyricism in the stylistic code adopted by the artist, are innervated in the new basic catechetical intent, which at the end of the century produced a certain figurative rigorism. The present, however, still responds to that extraordinary Roman dynamism that raised the capital to a bulwark for the entire mannerist lesson, matched only by a second artistic center, the Florentine one. The engaging carriage of the Virgin reflects the contemporary examples of Giuseppe Valeriano (1542-1596), a Jesuit painter, returning in the Marriage of the Virgin of the Roman Church of Jesus, as well as in the Madonna of Sorrows in the Recanati Altarpiece, equal ardor. But it is in the Assumption of the Virgin painted in four hands with Scipione Pulzone...
Category

Antique Early 17th Century Italian Paintings

Materials

Canvas

Mannerist Italian painter - 16th/17th figure painting - Madonna praying
Located in Varmo, IT
Umbrian-Roman Master (16th-17th century) - Madonna in Prayer. 84 x 58.5 cm unframed, 96 x 70.5 cm with frame. Antique oil painting on canvas, in a wooden frame (not signed). Condi...
Category

16th Century Mannerist Figurative Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Madonna Maria Sassoferrato Paint Oil on canvas Old master 18th Century Italian
Located in Riva del Garda, IT
Madonna with Sleeping Child Follower of Giovan Battista Salvi known as 'il Sassoferrato' (1609 - 1685) Roman painter 18th century Oil on canvas Measurements: canvas 64 x 50 cm, in frame 76 x 62 cm. This delicate depiction of the Madonna in adoration of the Child exhibits all the human dimension and sweetness of the maternal atmosphere: Mary clasps the sleeping child to her in a tender embrace, which touches her cheek, enveloped and protected by the mantle and even a flap of the mother's veil. The pictorial style and composition recall the ambit of Giovan Battista Salvi, the Sassoferrato, who distinguished himself expressly for this subject, with the Virgin immortalised in a humble and strongly earthly pose, depicted with simple white, red and blue colours and delicate plays of nuances on the faces and hands. This iconographic prototype was so successful that it became the painting for countless works destined for devotion during the 17th and 18th centuries, particularly appreciated for private commissions due to its marked gentleness and formal perfection, particularly of the faces. Born in Marchigiano, Salvi developed his activity in Rome, following the dictates of the classicist sacred painting of the Bolognese school of Reni, Carracci and Domenichino, but succeeding in having an autonomous and therefore clearly distinguishable style.  In very good overall condition, there are some small scattered restorations and some unravelling of the painted surface. Framed in a beautiful gilded frame. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: The work is sold with a certificate of authenticity and descriptive iconographic card. We take care of and organise the transport of the purchased works, both for Italy and abroad, through professional and insured carriers. It is also possible to see the painting in the gallery in Riva del Garda...
Category

18th Century Old Masters Paintings

Materials

Oil

Madonna Maria Piola Paint Oil on canvas 17/18th Century Old master Religious
Located in Riva del Garda, IT
Anton Maria Piola (Genoa, 1654 - 1715) circle Madonna and Child Genoese school of the second half of the 17th century Oil on canvas 93 x 74 cm.- In antique frame 110 x 92 cm. (Work with expertise by Dr. Arabella Cifani) In the pleasing work proposed, depicting a classical Nativity scene, the Madonna is immortalised in adoration as she gently holds the sheet on which the Child is lying, with a gesture of protection and pride that facilitates an atmosphere of intimate recollection, in addition to the presence of three cherubs at the top. The stylistic analysis of the canvas can easily be traced back to a painter of the Genoese school and active during the 17th century, specifically with the devotional works from the workshop of Domenico Piola (Genoa, 1627-1703), an absolute protagonist of Genoese Baroque culture. Piola was the owner of the most important city painting workshop of the time, known as 'Casa Piola', where his sons Paolo Gerolamo and Anton Maria also collaborated. His production, which specialised in a type of highly decorative, profane and allegorical paintings, destined for the decoration of Genoese patrician palaces, also included a refined series of works of a religious nature. In particular, the style of our beautiful breast painting...
Category

17th Century Old Masters Paintings

Materials

Oil

18th Century Oil on Canvas Italian Religious Painting Madonna with Child, 1750
Located in Vicoforte, IT
A refined 18th-century Italian painting. This artwork oil on canvas depicts a splendid Madonna and Child with a cherub, crafted with exquisite skill. The composition dates stylistica...
Category

1750s Figurative Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil