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An Angel
Francesco Granacci·1520
Historical Context
Francesco Granacci's Angel belongs to the Florentine painter's output of single-figure devotional works produced alongside his larger altarpiece commissions. Granacci, who was a childhood friend of Michelangelo and collaborated with him on the Sistine ceiling preparations, developed an attractive minor Florentine style that combined Ghirlandaio's workshop training with awareness of the great changes his famous friend was introducing into Italian art. His angels typically show the graceful figure style and warm coloring inherited from Ghirlandaio, maintaining an accessible devotional quality that served private patrons seeking refined Florentine workmanship without Michelangelo's overwhelming grandeur.
Technical Analysis
The painting demonstrates the technical conventions and artistic vocabulary of the period, with attention to composition, color, and the rendering of form appropriate to the subject.
See It In Person
More by Francesco Granacci

Saint John the Baptist Bearing Witness
Francesco Granacci·ca. 1506–7
John the Baptist being carried to Zacharias
Francesco Granacci·c. 1510

Rest on the Flight into Egypt with the Infant Saint John the Baptist
Francesco Granacci·1494
Madonna Enthroned with the blessing child, John the Baptist and St. Michael the Archangel
Francesco Granacci·1497



