24 December: open from 10.00 to 15.00. 25 December: museum closed. 

These two panels were painted by an anonymous 15th-century German artist and may have formed part of a larger ensemble. They were cut down in the past at the edges, as can be seen in the detail of the two hands at the edge of The Birth of the Virgin, which may have belonged to a praying figure. Both scenes are set in simply constructed interiors in which the figures and objects are rather awkwardly located within the pictorial space. In The Birth of the Virgin we see Saint Anne sitting in bed, having just given birth to her daughter. Around her are the holy women who attended the birth, one of them at the foot of the bed holding the Virgin in her arms. The Presentation in the Temple depicts the inside of a church with an altar that separates the three figures: Simeon on the right, and the Virgin and Child on the left. These two panels have been stylistically related to three others.

 

15th Century14th and 15th Centuries - Early german paintingPaintingpanel
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