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The Crowning of the Virgin

The Crowning of the Virgin

Anoniem (in circa 1450)

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Specifications

Title The Crowning of the Virgin
Material and technique Pen and brush and brown ink, brown wash, watercolour and bodycolour, gold leaf, on parchment
Object type
Drawing > Two-dimensional object > Art object
Location This object is in storage
Dimensions Height 338 mm
Width 245 mm
Artists Draughtsman: Anoniem
Accession number DN 93/1 (PK)
Credits Gift Dr A.J. Domela Nieuwenhuis, 1923
Department Drawings & Prints
Acquisition date 1923
Creation date in circa 1450
Inscriptions 'ecce angius dei' (centre, pen and brown ink)
Collector Collector / Adriaan Domela Nieuwenhuis
Provenance Dr. Adriaan J. Domela Nieuwenhuis (1850-1935, L.356b), Munich/Rotterdam, donated with his collection in 1923 (Anonymous Italian, 14th century)
Research Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
Literature Ter Molen 1999, p. 230, ill.
Material
Object
Technique
Highlight > Painting technique > Technique > Material and technique
Geographical origin Italy > Southern Europe > Europe

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Entry catalogue Italian Drawings 1400-1600

Author: Klazina Botke

This drawing represents the crowning of the Virgin. In an architectural setting with both Classical and Gothic elements, four groups of figures have been placed in a clearly hierarchical position relative to each other. At the top are Christ and the Virgin, seated on a throne with a group of kneeling angels on either side. The two angels at the front on the outside are playing an organ and a lira da braccio. The register below is occupied by the twelve apostles sitting on a long bench. St Peter sits left of centre with the keys to the Kingdom of Heaven in his hand; opposite him St Paul reads a book. The third tier is made up of various saints, some of whom are clearly recognizable: St Francis with the stigmata, St Stephen with a stone on his bloodstained head and St Catherine with her wheel beside her. Amidst these saints stands St John the Baptist, pointing upwards with one hand and holding a banderole that reads ‘ecce agnius dei’ (Behold the Lamb of God) in the other. In the fifteenth century, with the rise of the volgare (Tuscan vernacular), ‘agnus’ was quite often spelled ‘agnius’.[1] At the bottom of the composition kneels a group of chosen men in contemporary fifteenth-century clothes, who watch the scene.

The coronation of the Virgin as the Queen of Heaven is not described in the Bible, but is an interpretation of a number of biblical texts and based on a passage from Jacobus de Varagine’s Golden Legend, a thirteenth-century collection of the lives of saints.[2] This important event in the life of the Virgin was often used in horaria (books of hours), as an illustration accompanying Compline, the final prayer of the day.[3] Because the back of the parchment sheet is lined, and the size of the sheet corresponds with that of manuscripts of this kind, it could well be that the drawing was intended for an horarium.[4]

Illustrations of the crowning of the Virgin became increasingly popular as the century advanced. Compositions like the one on the Rotterdam sheet are found mainly in the Veneto, among them the famous panel by Jacobello del Fiore (1370-1437) of 1438.[5] Here, too, there is a Gothic throne with different levels and various groups in attendance at the ceremony: the patriarchs and apostles on the right, prophets and martyrs on the left, below them saints and holy virgins, and angels making music right at the front. The model for this composition was undoubtedly the large fresco by Guariento di Arpo (c.1310-c.1370) in the Sala del Maggior Consiglio in the Doge’s Palace in Venice. Only fragments of that fresco, painted around 1365, now remain.[6]

The sheet was once attributed to the Sienese artist Lippo Memmi (c.1291-1356), but given similarities in structure and composition to works from the Veneto it is more likely that the Rotterdam drawing was made there.[7] The kneeling men’s contemporary clothes and the style of the architecture make a date of around 1450 the most probable.

Footnotes

[1] This observation was made by Victor Schmidt on 31 October 2021. 

[2] These Bible texts are Song of Songs 4 and 8, Psalm 45:11-12 and Revelations 1-7.

[3] New York 1997-98a, p. 77.

[4] For two examples see London, British Library, Royal 2 B XV, fol. 55v, c.1501-10; New York, Morgan Library & Museum, MS M.357. Fol. 014v, c.1440.

[5] Venice, Gallerie dell’Academia, inv. 1.

[6] The fresco was almost completely destroyed in a fire in 1577. For an analysis of the work see Murat 2016.

[7] The attribution to Memmi comes from A.J. Domela Nieuwenhuis’s inventory book. The attribution to an artist from the Veneto was put forward by Victor Schmidt in an email of 31 October 2021.

Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
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