Georges de la Tour, The Magdalen with the Smoking Flame (detail), c. 1635–37, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, gift of The Ahmanson Foundation, photo © Museum Associates/LACMA

50 Works 50 Weeks: Georges de la Tour’s “The Magdalen with the Smoking Flame”

As LACMA prepares for the 2026 public opening of the new David Geffen Galleries, the future home of the museum’s permanent collection spanning a breadth of eras and cultures, we’re sharing 50 iconic artworks that will be on view in the building over the next 50 weeks in the series 50 Works 50 Weeks.

Although Georges de La Tour (1593–1652) spent his entire artistic career in provincial France, far from cosmopolitan centers and artistic influences, he developed a poignant style as profound as the most illustrious painters of his day. In his lifetime his work appeared in the prominent royal collections of Europe. La Tour's early training is still a matter for speculation, but in the province of Lorraine he encountered the artist Jean Le Clerc, a follower of the Italian painter Caravaggio. From this source likely came La Tour's concern with simplicity, realism, and essential detail.


Georges de la Tour, The Magdalen with the Smoking Flame, c. 1635–37, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, gift of The Ahmanson Foundation, photo © Museum Associates/LACMA

Mary Magdalen was a follower of Christ and served as a model for contemplative devotion, particularly among women. The absence of explicit narrative in this painting emphasizes Mary's state of mind and heart rather than time and place. The simple composition of vertical and horizontal shapes draws the viewer into the Magdalen's contemplative world. The skull, books of Scripture, and scourge (used in acts of self-punishment) set the mood, but the chief symbol and true subject of the work is the candle at which Mary gazes in her meditation. Rendered in extraordinary detail and modulation, it emits the light that followers of St. John of the Cross called “the living flame of love,” toward which spiritual pilgrims are drawn out of the “dark night of the soul.” La Tour scrupulously conveys the tactile quality of surfaces. The polished skull and leather books have different reflective qualities; Mary's lustrous hair, smooth flesh, crinkled blouse and heavy skirt are meticulously and distinctly rendered. Each spare detail is carefully regulated to achieve an overall balance of form and light.