Melody Art
Melody Art

Original Painting Information
Description: original oil on canvas
Price: Please enquire
Image size: 19.3 h x 11.8 w in
49 h x 30 w cm
Code:: MA107
All work includes delivery to UK mainland
© 2004 to 2008 Melody Art - All images and text - All rights reserved - Prices correct at the time of publishing


Original painting in oil on canvas of Madonna or Mary the mother of Jesus.
Mary (Judeo-Aramaic: מרים, Maryām, from Hebrew Miriam, Greek Μαριαμ or Μαρια, in
Arabic مريم Maryam), and called since medieval times Madonna (My Lady), resident
in Nazareth in Galilee, is known from the New Testament[1] as the mother of Jesus
of Nazareth. The New Testament describes her as a young maiden who conceived by the
agency of the Holy Spirit whilst she was already the betrothed wife of Joseph of
the House of David and awaiting their imminent formal home-taking ceremony (the concluding
Jewish wedding rite).
Christians generally maintain that she was a virgin at the point of conception and
at least until the birth of Jesus. The Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and Oriental
Orthodox Churches and some Protestant denominations also maintain that Mary remained
a virgin throughout the rest of her life.
The New Testament recounts her presence at important stages during her son's adult
life (e.g., at the Wedding at Cana and at his crucifixion). Also, she was present
at communal prayers immediately after Jesus' Ascension.
Narratives of her life are further elaborated in later Christian apocrypha, who give
the names of her parents as Joachim and Anne.
Christian churches teach various doctrines concerning Mary, and she is the subject
of much veneration. The area of Christian theology concerning her is known as Mariology.
The conception of her son Jesus is believed to have been an act of the Holy Spirit,
and to fulfill the prophecy of Isaiah that a virgin (or young woman) would bear a
son who would be called Immanuel ("God with us").[5] The Roman Catholic Church, Eastern
Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches venerate her as the Ever-Virgin Mother of
God (Theotokos), who was specially favoured by God's grace (Catholics hold that she
was conceived without original sin) and who, when her earthly life had been completed,
was assumed bodily into Heaven. Some Protestants, including certain Anglicans, Methodists
and Lutherans, embrace veneration of Mary and also hold some of these doctrines.
Others, especially in the Reformed tradition, question or even condemn the devotional
and doctrinal position of Mary in the above traditions. Mary also holds a revered
position in Islam.
The Roman Catholic tradition has a well established philosophy for the study and
veneration of the Virgin Mary via the field of Mariology with Pontifical schools
such as the Marianum specifically devoted to this task
Madonna in red
Original oil painting on canvas