St. Joseph the Carpenter, oil painting created about 1642–44 by French artist Georges de la Tour. One of the candle-lit paintings for which Tour is best known, this intimate religious scene is also touchingly human.
The story of the artist’s life and works is patchy. Although he enjoyed success and was well known in his own lifetime, La Tour was forgotten for several centuries—his work was rediscovered early in the 20th century, initially by German art historian Hermann Voss. It is generally assumed that this French painter was influenced by the paintings of Caravaggio or of his followers. However, it may be that La Tour independently explored the effects of shadow and light cast by a single candle.
La Tour often painted religious scenes, which exhibit a stillness and an accessible naturalism. He returned several times to the theme of Mary Magdalene’s repentance as well as to scenes of Jesus’s early life. St. Joseph the Carpenter shows Joseph teaching Jesus in the carpenter’s shop. The style is realistic, detailed, and carefully planned. Joseph bends over his work, while the child Jesus holds the candle—because, in Christian belief, he is the light of the world illuminating the darkness.