Currently not on view

The Visitation,

1643–48

Philippe de Champaigne, 1602–1674; born Brussels, Belgium; died Paris, France
y1994-17
The Virgin Mary, who has just learned of her pregnancy from the archangel Gabriel, greets her cousin, the elderly Elizabeth, at the doorway of her house. The formerly barren Elizabeth is now six months pregnant with John the Baptist. According to the evangelist Luke, “when Elizabeth heard the salutation of Mary, the babe leaped in her womb” (Luke 1: 41). Here Saints Zacharias, husband of Elizabeth, and Joseph, fiancé of Mary, are also present at the Visitation. Philippe de Champaigne, a follower of Jansenism, an Augustinian movement in the French Catholic Church, painted several similar versions of the subject. The scene may have appealed to Jansenists because their doctrine denied free will and emphasized God’s grace and predestination.

More Context

Handbook Entry

Information

Title
The Visitation
Dates

1643–48

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
114.5 × 88.5 cm (45 1/16 × 34 13/16 in.) frame: 142.2 × 113 × 12.4 cm (56 × 44 1/2 × 4 7/8 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Fowler McCormick, Class of 1921, Fund
Object Number
y1994-17
Culture
Materials

Possibly sold Paris, 30 March-4 April, 1818 (Dorival cat. no. 471) and/or Paris 18 November, 1841 (Dorival cat. no. 472).<br>Possibly sold vente Burgevin, Paris, 1 Feb. 1832, lot 1(3 pieds 5 po. x. 2 pieds 9 po) and vente de Frainays, Paris 20-23, August 1833 lot 25.<br>Von Thum zu Heyl Collection, Pforzheim, Germany (said to have been acquired before his death in 1923 by the owner’s great-grandfather). Sale, Sotheby’s, London, December 12, 1990, cat. no. 58. Arhold, Inc., London. 1994 purchase by Princeton University Art Museum.