Saint Francis and a Bishop Saint, Saint John the Baptist and Saint Dominic

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Saint Francis and a Bishop Saint, Saint John the Baptist and Saint Dominic

Creator

Fra Angelico (Guido di Pietro, Fra Giovanni da Fiesole)

Italian Artist · 1395–1455

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"The man who occupies himself with the things of Christ should live with Christ," said Fra Angelico, according to biographer Giorgio Vasari. When he became a Dominican monk around 1417, Giovanni da Fiesole was already a working artist. His style earned him the nickname "angelic," and the Dominican order gave him the standard honorarium *Fra* (brother). At the time of his death, Fra Angelico was on

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Date
late 1420s
Medium
Tempera and gold leaf on panel
Culture
Italian
Department
Paintings
Institution
Getty Museum

These panels once served as wings of a portable altarpiece used for private devotion. The left panel shows Saint Francis, who is recognized by the stigmata on his hands, feet, and side. The three knots tied in the sash around his waist symbolizing his Franciscan Order's three religious vows: poverty, chastity, and obedience. An unidentified bishop saint wearing a cope and miter and holding a crozier stands to the left of Francis. The right panel depicts Saint John the Baptist, who is identified by his reed cross and tunic of animal skins, and Saint Dominic, who wears the habit of his Dominican Order. He holds a lily, the symbol of chastity, and carries a book of the Gospels. The Dominican monk Fra Angelico, whose clerical name means "Angelic Brother," was among the first to adopt Masaccio's innovative naturalism. Though he still employed a gold background, Fra Angelico used shading to model plausible figures in the round. These paintings epitomize his particular delicacy of color, sensitivity of expression, and ability to convey the spiritual grace of saints.

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