
The painting has been established as a close copy of Jan van Eyck's Virgin with Child at a Fountain, though with many significant modifications, including the widening of the pictoral space, the addition of the two coronating angels, and the placement of the scene in a contemporary setting with a view of Bruges in the distance. van Eyck's panel was heavily influenced by the conventions of Byzantine art, and was likely itself a blend of specific works. Although it is indirectly rerceived, the Byzantine influnece can be seen in the David painting, especially in sections of the canvas decorated with golden paint: the rim of Mary's dress, the wings of the crowning angels, and the musical instruments. Yet the painting is mid-Rennaisance with its humanising of the Virgin and child; in earlier works the mother and child figures were presented as distant and remote deities. In David's panel they are utterly human, and recognisable as an affectionate and bonded mother and son.
Virgin and Child with Four Angels has been housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York since its donation from a private collection in 1977. David inscribed the painting with the words "IHESVS [RE]DEMPT[OR]" ("Jesus Redeemer").
Description
Painted for private devotion, it shows a full-length Virgin Mary holding the child Jesus. Mother and son are surrounded by four angels; the two above Mary are adorned with large colourful wings and hold a golden crown as if coronating Mary as Queen of Heaven while another two, each bearing large wings, sit on either side of her playing a harp and lute respectively. The scene takes place below a Gothic arch in a walled garden—intended to represent Mary's pureness and virginity and before a view of contemporary Bruges.
Painted on wood with a narrow, fine brush, the work is unusually vivacious and detailed. Mary has long curled brown hair, the strands of which are finely detailed with extremely thin brush strokes. She wears a heavily folded red gown lined with minutely described gold stitching which are so delicately woven into the trims of dress they are not usually visible in reproduction. Jesus is wrapped in a white swaddling blanket, some of which hangs below him in vertical folds, the lines of which are continued in the folds of Mary's dress. The angels to their right and left wear black and light blue robes respectively.

The churches of Sint-Jakobs and Onze-Lieve-Vrouw can be identified in the cityscape beyond the garden. The placement of a Carthusian monk walking underneath a tree in the garden behind the main figures makes it likely that the work was commissioned by a member of their monastery in Bruges.
The painting likely formed the centre panel of a triptych or small winged altarpiece which was broken up at some unknown point. It has been speculated that the archway above Mary extended to two side panels in reference to the Trinity.
van Eyck original
During the early 1500s Jan van Eyck's influence was at its height, and David heavily based his painting on van Eyck's late work Virgin and Child at a Fountain.

His private collection, Belgium Virgin and Child, also dated c 1510–15 is based on a painting by Adriaen Isenbrandt, and is one of three near identical variants David painted of the scene in that format and pose.
David has added two more angels to van Eyck's scene, and sets the figures in a recognisable contemporary location. The figures of Mary and Jesus are near identical in both works, from the vertical folds of Mary's dress, to the raised knee and arms of Jesus, with one arm reaching over his mother's shoulder, while the other reaches for her neck. Van Eyck's work was influenced by the Icons of Byzantine art, and this influence carries through to Gerard's piece.
Art historian Maryan Ainsworth describes the painting as a "devotional object for the veneration of an esteemed icon" and believes that the Byzantine influence "trickled down" from van Eyck.
It is not known for certain, however, which specific icons may have formed the basis for Virgin with Child at a Fountain, though suggestions based on similarity of pose and form have been made, including frescos in Notre Dame des Grâce in Montreal and Santa Maria del Carmine, Naples.
Gerard presents a very different representation of the Virgin than found in Byzantine representations, she is less an remote iconic diety and more recognisably human.
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Virgin and Child with Four Angels - FaceLeakz Wiki
Posted By imroee @ Wednesday, July 13, 2011
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