
Saint Anthony Abbot
Fra Angelico·1440–41
Historical Context
Fra Angelico's Saint Anthony Abbot (1440–41) was likely a pilaster panel from an altarpiece at the convent of San Marco in Florence, commissioned by Cosimo de' Medici. Fra Angelico (born Guido di Pietro), a Dominican friar, understood painting as a form of prayer, and his images embody a luminous devotional clarity unmatched in early Renaissance Florence. Working in tempera on panel, he combined gold ground traditions of Gothic altarpieces with the spatial innovations of Masaccio and Brunelleschi, creating images of profound spiritual authority. His work at San Marco set the standard for monastic devotional painting in the mid-fifteenth century.
Technical Analysis
Fra Angelico's tempera-on-panel technique produces his characteristic luminous, jewel-like color and refined linear clarity. The saint is rendered with the serene dignity and precise draftsmanship that mark Fra Angelico as a bridge between Gothic decorative tradition and Renaissance naturalism.
See It In Person
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