Circle of JUAN LUIS ZAMBRANO (Córdoba, 1598 - 1639).
"Annunciation.
Oil on canvas. Relined.
Measurements: 103 x 161 cm; 122 x 186 cm (frame).
In this canvas the episode of the Annunciation is represented, with a composition of long tradition that organizes the space symmetrically, with the figures of Mary and the archangel Gabriel facing each other, in half profile, and the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove on top. The scene is set in a dark interior scene, typical of the Spanish naturalistic baroque, immersed in an expressive and nuanced half-light on which the figures stand out, vividly illuminated. The classical compositional rigor acquires dynamism through the zigzagging rhythm, dynamic and distinctly baroque, which begins at Mary's head, passes through the face and hand of the angel and culminates in the upper Gloria break, where the Holy Spirit appears.
The Annunciation is one of the most represented themes in Christian art for marking the Incarnation of Christ as man and as God, while Mary maintains her purity and virginal state, points of great theological importance. Thus, throughout the evolution of the different styles in European art, there is a great variety of models and different details according to style, school and period. The present work is related to Baroque works because of the palette chosen, the iconography (with details maintained from previous traditions), the light contrasts, etc., and it is especially inscribed in the circle of Juan Luis Zambrano.
It is known that Zambrano was born in Cordoba in 1598, since on February 13 of that year he was baptized in the parish church of El Sagrario and that his parents were Álvaro Sánchez and Juana Gómez. Of the painter's childhood hardly anything is known, and less of his formation and apprenticeship; Palomino, Ceán Bermúdez, González de Guevara make him a disciple of Pablo de Céspedes, an opinion that today is not accepted, since when the illustrious racionero died, in 1608, Zambrano was barely ten years old, which makes us discard a direct relationship of apprenticeship. It is more admissible to suspect that, when Céspedes died and the city lacked great masters, he went to Seville, in search of new channels and wider possibilities than those offered in his native city, and that there he came into contact with the most prestigious artists who at that time -first decades of the 17th century-, stood out in the field of painting, such as Francisco Pacheco, Juan de las Roelas, Francisco de Herrera El Viejo. It is precisely the traces that can be seen in Zambrano's work - coming from the style of both Roelas and Herrera - that lead us to affirm the reality of certain contacts established with the Sevillian School, without being able to specify whether they were direct or through the knowledge of his pictorial productions. Whatever the case may be, it seems admissible to think that Juan Luis Zambrano, eager to learn new things, and attracted by the fame and splendor of the city of Seville, went to this city as Mohedano had done and later Antonio del Castillo would do. It is impossible to specify what relationship the painter had with Seville or what years of his youth he spent there; what is known today is that he died in this city and is even attributed with a production that was previously considered Zurbaránesque.