Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Structured into planes and facets, the madonna and child figure acquires an essential simplicity and austere purity. The central figure conveys a presence that consists of the combination of vulnerability in the lack of social embellishments, and dignity and solidity in the broadly structured lines.

  2. His Madonna of the Slums is a portrayal of a mother and child from the countryside who became urban shanty residents once in the city. In his Jeepneys, Manansala combined the elements of provincial folk culture with the congestion issues of the city.

  3. Madonna of the Slums expresses sadness. The subject both looking away implies that they were both thinking maybe what to eat, where to go or what to do next. It also portrays the truth about all these people, they live in poverty. Madonna wears ragged clothes and her child having no clothes at all.

  4. Nov 29, 2012 · His Madonna of the Slums is a portrayal of a mother and child from the countryside who became urban shanty residents once in the city. In his Jeepneys, Manansala combined the elements of provincial folk culture with the congestion issues of the city.

  5. Jul 27, 2023 · Vicente Silva Manansala painted Madonna of the Slums in 1950. Painted in the same method as Manansala, it depicts two individuals who are believed to originate from the countryside and have become shanty inhabitants of the populous metropolis.

  6. In this video, we explore the masterpiece "Madonna of the Slums" by Filipino artist Vicente Manansala. Created in 1950, the painting depicts the Virgin Mary and the infant Jesus in the...

  7. One of his iconic works, "Madonna of the Slums", portrays a mother and child from the countryside who become urban shanty residents upon arriving in the city. Through this painting, Manansala addressed poverty, displacement, and the clash of rural and urban realities.