Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Madonna of Humility (Fra Angelico)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Year
  
1433–1435

Artist
  
Fra Angelico

Medium
  
Tempera on wood

Madonna of Humility (Fra Angelico) httpsuploads4wikiartorgimagesfraangelicom

Dimensions
  
147 cm × 91 cm (58 in × 36 in)

Location
  
Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya, Barcelona

Similar
  
Saint Candidus, Jean‑Claude Richard - abbé of S, Resurrection of Christ, La Paloma, Mural Paintings from the

Madonna of humility fra angelico the miraculous discovery of a statue 1444


The Madonna of Humility is a painting by Fra Angelico which belongs to the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum in Madrid and is conserved on loan at the National Art Museum of Catalonia.

Contents

Madonna of Humility (Fra Angelico) Madonna of Humility c1418 Fra Angelico WikiArtorg

Description

Madonna of Humility (Fra Angelico) Fra Angelico Madonna of Humility ca 1440 Artsy

The Virgin seated on a cushion placed directly on the ground with the child standing on her lap, holds a vase in her left hand which contains roses and a lily, symbols of motherhood and purity. The Child, who is also holding a lily, rests his forehead on his mother's cheek. They are set under a cloth of honour made of gold and black embroidered brocade held by three angels, while two more angels are seated on the ground playing an organ and a lute. The monumental figures, the splendour of the clothes, the modulated light and the use of the blue colour place this panel in the purest fifteenth-century Italian style. The work has been identified as the one described by Giorgio Vasari in 1568 in the home of the Gondi family, in Florence, where it formed part of a polyptic.



Madonna of Humility (Fra Angelico) Madonna of Humility Fra Angelico Wikipedia

Madonna of Humility (Fra Angelico) FileFra Angelico Virgin of Humility Google Art Projectjpg

Madonna of Humility (Fra Angelico) Virgin of Humility YouTube

References

Madonna of Humility (Fra Angelico) Wikipedia