Epifania () is a cartoon or full-scale drawing in black chalk by Michelangelo, produced in Rome around 1550–1553. It is tall by wide, and is made up of 26 sheets of paper. The cartoon forms part of the collection of the British Museum in London.
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Epifania () is a cartoon or full-scale drawing in black chalk by Michelangelo, produced in Rome around 1550–1553. It is tall by wide, and is made up of 26 sheets of paper. The cartoon forms part of the collection of the British Museum in London.
==Subject matter== The composition shows the Virgin Mary, with the Christ child sitting between her legs. An adult male figure to the right, probably Saint Joseph, is pushed away by Mary. In front of him is the infant John the Baptist. The adult figure standing to Mary's left is unidentified, as are other figures only just visible in the background. Michelangelo repeatedly changed the composition and its forms, as is apparent in the cartoon's alterations. The composition was originally thought to be of the Three Kings, which may be the reason for the title, but is now understood as referring to Christ's siblings mentioned in the Gospels (explained by Saint Epiphanias—another possible source for the title—as Joseph's sons by a previous marriage, and hence Mary's stepsons, leaving their marriage unconsummated—hence her pushing Joseph away—and Mary forever a virgin).
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).