The
sacra conversazione developed as artists replaced earlier hieratic and compartmented
triptych or
polyptych formats for
altarpieces with compositions in which figures interacted within a unified
perspectival space. While traditional altarpieces generally retained a vertical format, the
sacra conversazione had all the principal figures on a single level, or nearly so. They therefore tended to move towards a horizontal format, as there was little but angels and architecture to put at the top of a vertical one, unless the divine figures were raised on a very high throne, as in the unusual composition of the
Castelfranco Madonna by
Giorgione (c. 1503). Here as in many works, the Virgin and Child are seated on a throne, but the saints stand, so in more typical examples with the throne only slightly raised on a
dais, the adult heads are at about the same level. The
sacra conversazione was one of the types of image that led to the horizontal format becoming common in panel paintings; before the Renaissance it was rare in altar pieces (while the format was certainly common in
murals). Often such works, especially if in a horizontal format and at half-length or with seated figures, were painted for the homes of wealthy faithful (and often collectors), whether for a private chapel or to be hung in other rooms, treated not unlike portraits or secular scenes. Early examples are the
Annalena Altarpiece (c. 1438–40),
San Marco Altarpiece (c. 1438–43) and
Fiesole Altarpiece by
Fra Angelico and the
Barbadori Altarpiece by
Filippo Lippi (1437,
Louvre). Having the Virgin the same size as the other figures is often regarded as essential to the type, so disqualifying most earlier works, where the Virgin is shown much larger. Among other artists to depict such a scene are
Piero della Francesca,
Giovanni Bellini,
Paolo Veronese, and
Andrea Mantegna. Some scholars have suggested that the
Maestà painted by
Duccio in 1308–11 for
Siena Cathedral can be regarded as the
"prima conversazione sacra italiana". The early examples such as the Bellini illustrated rarely show actual "conversation" or much interaction, though this may be seen from the 16th century on, as in the
Madonna and Child with Saints Luke and Catherine of Alexandria by
Titian. In the first examples the setting is normally architectural, loosely representing heaven, but also, until Titian's
Pesaro Altarpiece (begun 1519), continuing the architecture of the architectural frame and therefore that of the original church setting for which it was painted. This was a radical rethink of the type, apparently set outside some temple portico with large soaring columns, viewed obliquely. The Virgin and Child are no longer at the centre of the composition, but to the right of the picture space. As in earlier altarpieces, the choice of saints is largely dictated by the patron saints of the donor and their family, and those of the church, city, diocese or
religious order concerned. The mixture of figures from different periods that is normal in the type makes it clear that no historical incident is being depicted, and whatever the setting, the space should be understood as mystical rather than any actual place.
Landscape settings ,
Palma Vecchio, c. 1519 Also in the 1510s, Titian and other
Venetians had been developing the mostly northern tradition of outside settings in a garden or, especially later, an open landscape. The height of
Giorgione's
Castelfranco Madonna of about 1503 had allowed a landscape to show above the lower zone with the saints.
Palma Vecchio became a specialist in strongly horizontal
sacre conversazioni, with the figures mostly seated or kneeling in a rather tight group, combining informality and a monumental classicism. Such compositions also drew on traditional outdoor groups featuring the
Holy Family such as the
Rest on the Flight into Egypt, the
Adoration of the Shepherds and Madonna and Child compositions with angels and other figures. The Virgin placed in an enclosed garden is known as '
, and when she is surrounded by female saints it is known as a '. It was a northern speciality, when several of the figures beside the Virgin were sitting, on a bench or bank or on the ground, usually in a garden setting within an enclosure of some sort – originally a metaphor for the Virgin's womb, as the '''' began as a representation of the
Annunciation, marking Mary's conception of Christ. These more relaxed groups were continued in Venetian paintings set in open landscape. By the end of the 16th century, "the dominant relationships in an altarpiece such as
Annibale Carracci’s
Virgin and Child with Saints Catherine and John the Evangelist (1593,
Pinacoteca Nazionale di Bologna) were not between the figures within the picture but between them and the spectator." By "
Baroque painting the Virgin is removed from the earth whenever the context allows", and the scenes are often set among the heavenly clouds. Examples in sculpture are relatively rare, if only because of the number of figures involved. One exception was planned by
Michelangelo for the
Medici Chapel in
Florence, though he left the project before the two Medici patron saints flanking his
Virgin and Child were done; these were made by others following his designs. ==
In aria compositions ==