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The Resurrected Christ Appearing to St. Magdalene by Luca Signorelli

The Resurrected Christ Appearing to St. Magdalene

Luca Signorelli·1514

Historical Context

The Resurrected Christ Appearing to Mary Magdalene (Noli me tangere) was painted in 1514, a decade after the Orvieto frescoes, when Signorelli was working primarily in his native Cortona and nearby towns. This painting at the Detroit Institute of Arts shows the encounter in the garden, the moment Christ tells Magdalene not to touch him. Luca Signorelli, trained under Piero della Francesca and active in Umbria and central Italy across the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, was one of the most original painters of his generation. His mastery of the male nude figure in dynamic action — developed through sustained practice in the fresco cycles at Loreto, Cortona, and above all in the Last Judgment cycle at Orvieto Cathedral — was the direct precursor of Michelangelo's treatment of the human body in the Sistine Chapel. His influence on the development of Renaissance figure painting was fundamental, and his position between Piero's geometric clarity and Michelangelo's dynamic power makes him one of the essential links in the chain of Italian Renaissance art.

Technical Analysis

Christ's athletic, muscular body reflects Signorelli's renowned interest in anatomy that deeply influenced the young Michelangelo, with powerful contours defining the risen figure against an Umbrian landscape.

Look Closer

  • ◆Signorelli depicts the Noli me tangere moment — 'Touch me not' — with Christ stepping back slightly, his open hand gesture containing both tenderness and the boundary of resurrection's untouchability.
  • ◆Mary Magdalene's recognizing gaze is painted with an intensity that captures the specific emotional register of recognition after devastating loss — more than joy, a kind of disbelief made credible.
  • ◆The garden setting is treated with the Umbrian landscape sensibility Signorelli had developed — specific trees and rocky terrain rather than the generic paradise garden.
  • ◆Christ's resurrection body is painted in warm golden light that distinguishes it from the normal human figures — a subtle supernatural quality achieved through elevated color temperature rather than explicit halo.
  • ◆The gardener's tool near Christ refers to Mary's initial misidentification of the risen Christ as the gardener — a detail from John's Gospel that Signorelli includes as a narrative annotation.

See It In Person

Detroit Institute of Arts

Detroit, United States

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Quick Facts

Medium
Oil on canvas
Era
High Renaissance
Style
High Renaissance
Genre
Religious
Location
Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit
View on museum website →

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The Assumption of the Virgin with Saints Michael and Benedict by Luca Signorelli

The Assumption of the Virgin with Saints Michael and Benedict

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The Crucifixion by Luca Signorelli

The Crucifixion

Luca Signorelli·c. 1504/1505

The Marriage of the Virgin by Luca Signorelli

The Marriage of the Virgin

Luca Signorelli·c. 1490/1491

Madonna and Child with Saints and Angels by Luca Signorelli

Madonna and Child with Saints and Angels

Luca Signorelli·mid or late 1510s

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