The Virgin suckling the Christ Child is a work of the Tüchlein type. These were paintings destined for clients of relatively modest means and were painted on cloth. Such works were cheaper than panel paintings and were produced in larger numbers. According to Colin Eisler the Virgin follows the type known as the Madonna Schöne, characterised by her animated face, small mouth and large eyes, a figure type that appeared around 1400. The form of the Virgin is triangular and the figures are set into a frame on which the artist has drawn the edges and painted the inscriptions. Mary holds the Christ Child without directly touching him, in reference to his divine status, but their gazes connect. This is one of the three traditional types of Tüchlein depictions of the holy Mother and Child studied by Didier Martens. Another type, of which there is an example in the Louvre, shows the Christ Child with his head tilted back, while the third type is a combination of both images. The artist has used the traditional gold background characteristic of Gothic and Early Renaissance religious painting.

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16th Century16th Century - Netherlandish paintingPaintingwatercolour and goldcloth attached to panel
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