The most prominent representative of the popular Styrian Baroque sculpture was Mihael Pogačnik (mentioned between 1709 and 1735) from a family of woodcarvers and sculptors active in Slovenske Konjice. Typical of the works by this workshop are vividly ornamented altars, with abundant ribbon acanthus ornament. Typified statues with repeated faces and gestures and dressed in picturesque, vibrant drapery are reminiscent in several elements of the works by the Franciscan carving workshop. Sergej Vrišer has established that Tyrolean patterns were accepted in the discussed woodcarving tradition by the intervention of the neighbouring Carinthia.
Characteristic of Pogačnik’s sculpture are figures conceived in a slight S-line, dressed in richly billowing drapery within which the bodily forms are completely concealed, only feet are bare, the facial typology is recurring, for instance a straight nose, thick hair and archaic smile. All these elements can be observed in the statue of the Immaculate who has clasped her hands in prayer, while she has turned her face towards the snake which she is trampling with her feet.
Mihael Pogačnik conceived his sculptural oeuvre as based on tradition but elevating it to new levels of quality by employing his own modification.