Mary Magdalen in Ecstasy

Caravaggio, Mary Magdalen in Ecstasy, 1606. Wikimedia Commons. · PD

Mary Magdalen in Ecstasy


Details

Year
1606
Medium
oil paint
Type
painting
Dimensions
106.5 × 91 cm

The story

Caravaggio painted this in the worst summer of his life. In late May 1606, in a brawl in Rome, he killed a man named Ranuccio Tomassoni and was sentenced in his absence to death, a sentence anyone was free to carry out. He fled the city and hid on the country estates of the Colonna family, and it was there, a hunted man, that he painted the Magdalen thrown back in ecstasy, or perhaps grief, her hands loosely clasped, tears on her face, everything else swallowed by darkness. He seems to have kept the picture with him as he moved from town to town. For a long time it was known only through copies made by his followers, until what looks like his own version surfaced in a private collection in 2014.

Mary Magdalen in Ecstasy — Caravaggio — MuseScope