The Trinity and Mystic Pietà is an oil-on-oak painting by German artist
Hans Baldung, produced in 1512. The painting shows
God the Father supporting his crucified son,
Jesus, a motif not often found in paintings from outside the fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries. The
Holy Spirit is depicted above them, represented by a dove; they are joined by the weeping figures of the
Virgin Mary and
Saint John the Apostle. Beneath the holy figures are a series of smaller individuals, who are assumed by art historians to be the family who commissioned the painting; this is likely to be the Bettschold and Rothschild families, given the coats of arms present in the lower corners. During the Middle Ages, donors were often depicted much smaller than the holy figures, in order to emphasise the difference between them. The painting is now in the collection of the
National Gallery in London.
Painting credit: Hans Baldung