The Nativity (Champaigne)
The Nativity is an oil on canvas painting by Flemish-French Philippe de Champaigne, created c. 1643. It has been in the Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille since 1804.
History and description
This painting was created around 1643 at the request of Jacques Tubeuf, superintendent of finances, to decorate the altar of his own chapel in the Oratory church in Paris. Around 1643, he had this chapel decorated by Champaigne. The Nativity occupied a central place in the chapel, flanked by paintings of the Visitation, Joseph's Dream, and at the top, the Assumption of Mary.After the French Revolution, the painting was seized by the revolutionary commission and taken to the depot of Petits Augustins, then to that of rue de Beaune. In 1801, it was attributed to the recently created Lille Museum of Fine Arts.
The canvas is divided into two parts. At the top, two angels on a platform of clouds and cherub heads observe the scene. Below, Mary and Joseph, accompanied by the ox and the donkey, barely visible, are in adoration before the Child Jesus, swaddled as he is described in the Gospel of Luke. In the background, a resplendent angel flies over the countryside to announce the coming of the Messiah to the shepherds. In the foreground, we can see a gourd and a walking stick which remind us that the Nativity is just a stage in the Sacred Family's journey, coming to be counted in Bethlehem.