Details
ATTRIBUTED TO PEDRO JOSÉ DÍAZ (ACTIVE 1770-1810)
Virgen con el niño
oil on canvas
unframed: 3518 x 30 in. (89.2 x 76.2 cm.)
framed: 4318 x 38 in. (109.5 x 96.5 cm.)
Provenance
Private collection, Asunción, circa 1940s
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Brought to you by

Lot Essay

The present devotional painting depicts the Virgin seated in a pink tunic and draped in a blue mantle, her veiled head marked by a soft halo and twelve stars. The Christ Child sleeps nude across her lap, watched over by three cherubim set against a subdued ground. The composition belongs to a long Marian tradition rooted in early Christianity, recalling the image attributed to Saint Luke and later variants known at Santa Maria Maggiore and Santa Maria del Popolo. Such models circulated widely in the seventeenth century through Jesuit patronage and printed sources, which played a central role in shaping artistic practice in the Viceroyalty of Peru.

Virgen con el niño likewise reflects the post-Tridentine language of the antimaniera, which favored restrained settings and an atmosphere conducive to meditation. These currents entered the Andean world through early Italian painters and were reinforced by figures such as Mateo Pérez de Alesio (1547-1606), whose Nursing Madonna after Pulzone’s Virgin of Divine Providence became a touchstone for devotional imagery in the Americas.

Pedro Díaz—active in Lima between roughly 1770 and 1815—remains only partially documented, but surviving works and early references by Hart-Terré and Vargas Ugarte allow scholars to situate him among the principal painters of late eighteenth-century Lima. A contemporary of José Gil de Castro (1783-1841), Pedro Díaz worked at the intersection of Rococo and Neoclassicism. Later research has identified portraits such as Bishop Juan José Priego y Caro (1772) and Viceroy Amat, now in the Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya. His ties to Cristóbal Lozano (1705-1776) are evident in his refined palette, ornamental detail, and subtle relief effects noted by Wuffarden (2015).

While Díaz produced occasional large religious canvases, his devotional output consists mostly of compact Marian scenes for domestic or convent settings. These compositions adapt Italian and classicist prototypes with quiet variations: the Child asleep, nursing, or shown with a symbolic cross. In the present Virgen con el niño, the triangular arrangement, generous drapery, and measured chiaroscuro give weight to the Virgin’s presence while preserving the tenderness of the scene.

Related Articles

Sorry, we are unable to display this content. Please check your connection.

More from
Latin American Art Online
Place your bid Condition report

A Christie's specialist may contact you to discuss this lot or to notify you if the condition changes prior to the sale.

I confirm that I have read this Important Notice regarding Condition Reports and agree to its terms. View Condition Report