BOTTICELLI's smallest ANNUNCIATION (in the LEHMANN COLLECTION)
This painting by Botticelli in the Lehmann Collection at the Met in New York is what I consider to be
the most exquisite painting of that subject from the Renaissance in Italy. A date in the 1490's would be appropriate for it since both figures are bending over, a characteristic found in figures that appear in late Botticelli paintings. (The museum dates it 1485.)
The painting is so small (7 1/2 X 12 3/8 inches) that it is hard to think it might have been part of a predella, or the base of an altarpiece where stories of the saints are usually told. (The photo shows it in a case surrounded by larger mid-size paintings.)
The museum guesses that it was a private devotional piece. Was it perhaps for the artist himself? And certainly its size lends to its being prized, as things painted in miniature tend to be. But the remarkable thing about this painting is that, even though everything in the scene is painted in tiny dimensions, the scene itself has a certain monumentality. How does the artist convey that?
SPACE in the TWO ROOMS and BEYOND - Botticelli marks out seven horizontals on the floor of the room in which the angel lands and five horizontal lines in the wooden ceiling of that same room.
The diminishing length of those horizontals along with the use of one-point perspective (where the diagonal lines lead to one point) gives the viewer the sense that the room is very deep and long.
LARGE-SCALE MOTIFS from ARCHITECTURAL ELEMENTS - The four grey pilasters, which also appear to diminish in size the further back we look, contribute to the enormity of the space and make us think we are in a palazzo in Florence with a room with a view.
VIEW OUT THE WINDOWS - The view in the windows of the mountains at a distance also makes us think of space that is enormous since the view seems infinite.
FURTHER SPACES IMPLIED TO RIGHT AND LEFT - On the right, the Virgin's bedroom is
indicated beyond the space she occupies and we see her red bed in that room with armoires behind it.
On the left of the angel, another room is implied by the light, both real and gold leaf, that floods into the entry hall where the angel is alighting. The angel appears to have flown in through a space between two of the pilasters on the left side. The figures do not overlap with parts of the frame, but we are still given the sensation that the world extends beyond the perimeters of the frame.
WHY IS IT EXQUISITE?
While the spaces containing the figures seem large and realistic and have such lovely light we want to inhabit them, the figures themselves have a beauty particular to Botticelli's vision of the world. The angel is a perfect creature, landing with grace on the pavement while holding out the lilies to the Virgin so that the blossoms themselves stand out in the air against the grey of the wall beyond and highlight the head and wings of the angel.
The fluttering drapery at the back of the angel's mantle and the finely wrought wings that look like delicate lace both add to the beauty of the moment. The angel's gestures, head down, knees bent, right hand holding up his white tunic slightly in order to appear more courtly are all designed to seduce both the Virgin and the viewer.
The Virgin's face is not the best Botticelli has produced, but her gesture, too, of REFLECTION, with one hand on her chest and one holding her mantle in imitation of the angel, is beautifully rendered so that we feel her submission even before she has given it.
She is enclosed by the grey walls of the room, but she is also enclosed by miles of white tulle and see-through voile used for the curtains, for the lectern cover, and hanging gracefully from the top of the high-bench behind her.
COLOR HARMONY: the greys and whites are balanced within the scene, and Botticelli utilizes a raspberry color to pick out the undergarments of the angel and the Madonna as well as the cushion on her bench.
The reds connect the two figures before we even think about how they are connected by the
story. The reds make a harmonic impression with the whites and greys, similar to the way reds function in Melozzo da Forli's frescoes or Piero della Francesca's.
LIGHT SOURCE - There is a unifying natural light source that falls from left to right on the pilasters and curtains, but there is a supernatural light source which emanates from the corridor behind the angel where the gold leaf lines of the holy spirit spread out.
CLARITY OF DRAMA - Two main rooms, two spaces, two figures - each figure is contained within its own space and we feel the air in both rooms. The angel alights in one moment and the Virgin replies with thinking in the other moment. Through these two tiny figures and their gestures, the artist conveys the whole drama and its import.
GRACEFUL HEADS and DRAPERY - The drapery falls over the bodies and furniture realistically and flows out behind them. The heads bow in towards the bodies to make each figure's outline incline toward the other as if two perfect ovals conversing rather than two people.
PERFECT MATH AND STILL LIFE - The way the artist has handled the diminution of the space speaks of an underlying mathematical perfection, as do the shapes of the vases and boxes set on the top of the bench of the Virgin.
The math of the piece is so beautifully rendered that we feel we can enter the space as though it were a box of wax figures set up in a scene.
MOVEMENT - But because of Botticelli's understanding of motion and how to convey it through paint, the figures seem alive and moving, not stiff and ill-conceived. They are invested with life by the painter so that they seem to breathe in the rooms they inhabit.
How close to an image of the holy SPIRIT is that air and breath? The mystery we witness as
viewers, in the hands of Botticelli, is given the extra dimension of GRACE IN MOTION, tangible and ephemeral in the same moment.
That the painter understood how to transform paint into grace is his own holy spirit.
Friday, November 27, 2015
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
DELLA ROBBIA's ANNUNCIATION in FLORENCE
DELLA ROBBIA and BOTTICELLI -
the two most exquisite ANNUNCIATIONS
So many Annunciation scenes were painted in the 15th century in Italy it might be difficult to single out any one as the most beautiful. But of all the Annunciations carried out by Italian Renaissance artists, two are conceived and produced in such a way that they could be chosen as the most exquisite renderings of that subject. This blog will be about the sculpted one, the next blog about the painted one.
ANDREA DELLA ROBBIA - Andrea della Robbia produces a blue and white and green-glazed terracotta bas-relief in a lunette shape for a chapel in the church of the Hospital of the Innocents, Santa Maria degli Innocenti. When the church is reorganized in the nineteenth century, the Della Robbia lunette is brought
into the courtyard of Brunelleschi's Hospital of the Innocents and placed within one of the lunette arches at the end of the covered walkway of the Cloister of the Boys. In the plan below, B is the Cloister of the Boys and L is the facade arcade visible in the exterior view. The lunette is placed in the lefthand corner of the darkened arcade of B, near the juncture with A. To see it, enter between the two D's and turn left.
The lunette is just visible in the view below in the far corner above a doorway in the Cloister of the Boys. The entrance doorway is in the middle.
(View of it turning left from entrance.)
Scholars disagree about the dating of this scene of the Annunciation, some placing it in the 1470's and indebted to Leonardo's Annunciation (previous blog), some arguing for a date of 1493 and a commission of Francesco del Pugliese. I tend to side with the earlier dating, in the 1470's, when Andrea della Robbia is starting out in the workshop of his uncle, Luca della Robbia.
WHAT qualities make this ANNUNCIATION EXQUISITE?
1)BALANCE of COMPOSITION
Angel Gabriel and the Virgin face each other as they kneel with their heads at the same height. They present a nearly symmetrical arrangement of two figures whose backs (in one case wings) curve in imitation of the curve of the lunette.
The symmetry is broken up by the arrival in DEUS EX-MACHINA of DEUS (God) (accompanied by angels) who puts his hands out to release the dove of the HOLY SPIRIT in flight towards Mary.
Even this group is balanced in a triangular arrangement with the lilies held by the Angel and the lectern supporting the Bible read by the Virgin.
Framing the whole are winged cherubs (appropriate for the setting) with sweet innocent faces.
2) GRACEFUL MOVEMENTS AND TOUCHES:
Andrea's handling of heads and hands gives us a sense of gentle, courtly movement. The smooth skin on the faces of the angels and of Gabriel and Mary contributes to a feeling of calm. Gabriel's hands address the Virgin in restrained fashion, as do God's hands above.
The Virgin's hands respond with one hand on her book and one on her chest, placed as if accepting a dance. All the gestures are gracefully rendered to tell the story.
EVEN THE DOVE of the holy spirit flies gracefully in with a MINIATURE HALO that matches his size!
3) CLARITY OF DRAMA and COLOR
The story told follows the text in the BOOK OF LUKE:
The eyes of Gabriel and parted lips indicate that he is speaking to Mary:
GABRIEL: "Hail, thou that art highly favoured, blessed art thou among women."
Mary replies without speaking, in the REFLECTION STAGE OF THE ANNUNCIATION, with eyes cast downward and with hand on book. Her gestures mirror the text of her thinking:
MARY "cast in her mind what manner of salutation this should be."
The white drapery of all the figures set against the blue of the sky emphasizes the main characters in the drama and makes their gestures clear. Andrea has tried to give some clouds to the sky behind to make this mystical event more naturalistic, and he adds green for the stems of the flowers for the same reason.
The Angel and Virgin appear on a stage with realistic bodies under their drapery. The sculptor captures an intense moment in their communication with the salutation of the angel in his hand and flowers, in the reply of the Virgin in her right hand gesture. The natural fluidity appears in the gestures of God's hands, too, as they contribute to the conception (in two senses.) The message that she will become pregnant even though she is a virgin arcs over the vase of flowers that are symbols of her purity and her fertility.
It is in the sweetness of the Angel's face and the sweetness of the Virgin's that Andrea conveys with exquisite artistry the magic of this moment.
How reassuringly harmonic these graceful, young figures must have seemed to the youths without parents in the Hospital of the Innocents, a foundling hospital! In Andrea's hands God's plan is a beautiful drama being played out. Anything is possible in a realm where God may fly in at any moment to touch your life.
the two most exquisite ANNUNCIATIONS
So many Annunciation scenes were painted in the 15th century in Italy it might be difficult to single out any one as the most beautiful. But of all the Annunciations carried out by Italian Renaissance artists, two are conceived and produced in such a way that they could be chosen as the most exquisite renderings of that subject. This blog will be about the sculpted one, the next blog about the painted one.
ANDREA DELLA ROBBIA - Andrea della Robbia produces a blue and white and green-glazed terracotta bas-relief in a lunette shape for a chapel in the church of the Hospital of the Innocents, Santa Maria degli Innocenti. When the church is reorganized in the nineteenth century, the Della Robbia lunette is brought
into the courtyard of Brunelleschi's Hospital of the Innocents and placed within one of the lunette arches at the end of the covered walkway of the Cloister of the Boys. In the plan below, B is the Cloister of the Boys and L is the facade arcade visible in the exterior view. The lunette is placed in the lefthand corner of the darkened arcade of B, near the juncture with A. To see it, enter between the two D's and turn left.
The lunette is just visible in the view below in the far corner above a doorway in the Cloister of the Boys. The entrance doorway is in the middle.
Scholars disagree about the dating of this scene of the Annunciation, some placing it in the 1470's and indebted to Leonardo's Annunciation (previous blog), some arguing for a date of 1493 and a commission of Francesco del Pugliese. I tend to side with the earlier dating, in the 1470's, when Andrea della Robbia is starting out in the workshop of his uncle, Luca della Robbia.
WHAT qualities make this ANNUNCIATION EXQUISITE?
1)BALANCE of COMPOSITION
Angel Gabriel and the Virgin face each other as they kneel with their heads at the same height. They present a nearly symmetrical arrangement of two figures whose backs (in one case wings) curve in imitation of the curve of the lunette.
In the center sits an urn filled with lilies:
The symmetry is broken up by the arrival in DEUS EX-MACHINA of DEUS (God) (accompanied by angels) who puts his hands out to release the dove of the HOLY SPIRIT in flight towards Mary.
Even this group is balanced in a triangular arrangement with the lilies held by the Angel and the lectern supporting the Bible read by the Virgin.
Framing the whole are winged cherubs (appropriate for the setting) with sweet innocent faces.
2) GRACEFUL MOVEMENTS AND TOUCHES:
Andrea's handling of heads and hands gives us a sense of gentle, courtly movement. The smooth skin on the faces of the angels and of Gabriel and Mary contributes to a feeling of calm. Gabriel's hands address the Virgin in restrained fashion, as do God's hands above.
The Virgin's hands respond with one hand on her book and one on her chest, placed as if accepting a dance. All the gestures are gracefully rendered to tell the story.
EVEN THE DOVE of the holy spirit flies gracefully in with a MINIATURE HALO that matches his size!
3) CLARITY OF DRAMA and COLOR
The story told follows the text in the BOOK OF LUKE:
The eyes of Gabriel and parted lips indicate that he is speaking to Mary:
GABRIEL: "Hail, thou that art highly favoured, blessed art thou among women."
Mary replies without speaking, in the REFLECTION STAGE OF THE ANNUNCIATION, with eyes cast downward and with hand on book. Her gestures mirror the text of her thinking:
MARY "cast in her mind what manner of salutation this should be."
The white drapery of all the figures set against the blue of the sky emphasizes the main characters in the drama and makes their gestures clear. Andrea has tried to give some clouds to the sky behind to make this mystical event more naturalistic, and he adds green for the stems of the flowers for the same reason.
It is in the sweetness of the Angel's face and the sweetness of the Virgin's that Andrea conveys with exquisite artistry the magic of this moment.
How reassuringly harmonic these graceful, young figures must have seemed to the youths without parents in the Hospital of the Innocents, a foundling hospital! In Andrea's hands God's plan is a beautiful drama being played out. Anything is possible in a realm where God may fly in at any moment to touch your life.
Monday, November 23, 2015
LEONARDO's ANNUNCIATION
LEONARDO'S ANNUNCIATION
Sometime in the 1470's Leonardo da Vinci painted an Annunciation for a nunnery in Florence; it is now in the Uffizi Gallery:
This rectangular painting is said to have come from the church of San Bartolommeo connected to a Benedictine nunnery on the other side of the Arno from the Duomo in Florence.
The nunnery was up on a hill above Porta San Frediano, the hill called Monte Oliveto because it was full of olive trees. (Monte Oliveto and the church still exist in Florence; from the Via Pisana follow the Via Monte Oliveto up the hill; it will wind around a grove of olive trees.)
But back to our painting. Throughout the Middle Ages and Renaissance Mary is known as the "porta clausa," the "closed door" and as the "hortus conclusus," the "enclosed garden."
Visual references to both those Latin metaphors can be found in Leonardo's painting. Where is the "porta clausa?" The door next to Mary on the right is "open" to reveal her bedroom, complete with bed, a domestic place of conception. The image of the red bed evokes the emotional intensity of her moment of pregnancy, but the open door there is not "closed."
Behind her body, though, are two impenetrable walls with quoins that come together to form a "porta clausa" for the phrase that refers to Mary's virginity. She sits at the juncture of those walls, enclosed by them. She is a closed door in this corner.
The Angel Gabriel, who arrives on uplifted wings and bended knees to announce to Mary that she will be pregnant with Christ by God, alights on a garden carpeted with botanically-correct flowers and plants which are in full bloom. (A recent book on Leonardo's flowers (2013, Aracne) by Giovanni Gestri - I Fiori di Leonardo details the accuracy of the artist as botanical observer.)
Mary and the Angel appear together in this "enclosed garden," "hortus conclusus." Behind the angel and Madonna is a low gray parapet which "encloses" the "garden." That the enclosure is only broken where the Angel holds forth lilies in bloom may suggest to the viewer that she is impenetrable except by God.
Lilies are signs of purity because they are white flowers, but the lilies held by the Angel are open and full, signs of fertility and ripeness. The coming together of fertility and inviolability as expressed by Leonardo happens in the most natural of scenes, outdoors in the enclosed garden.
Normally 15th-century Annunciation scenes have either God the Father flying in with angels in the sky or the dove of the Holy Spirit flying in as Mary hears the words of the Angel. It was said that as soon as the Angel's words reached her ear that she was impregnated. (See blog entry on Simone Martini's Annunciation, also in the Uffizi.) In Leonardo's Annunciation the only thing to appear above the heads of the main protagonists is a cloud with edges touched with light. But are we meant to see the face of God in the shadows of that cloud? are we meant to see an angel? or is the cloud the dove with outstretched wings? Leonardo makes the cloud deliberately mysterious and indefinite and yet part of Nature.
In his notebooks Leonardo studies nature in drawings and comments. God was present everywhere for him, in the cypresses behind the wall, in the lake beyond the garden, in the clouds that block our view of the mountain in the background and in the cloud which may form the shapes of the Deity.
The artist respects the tradition that maintains that Angel Gabriel had wings, but his wings are based on drawings Leonardo made himself of actual birds which he recorded.
Since Nature was his Deity (we rarely see him speak of holy figures in his writings), we see the divinity rendered by the artist here in the natural forms he observed. But the more he studied Nature, the more he realized how much of it was unfathomable, mysterious. In the background is the smoky atmosphere, the "sfumato" for which he is famous, the indefinite contours of things in the distance, especially the outlines of the mountain at the back. Leonardo chooses to represent this great divine mystery as the interaction of human beings with the Deity in Nature. His botanically-correct flowers, then, don't reduce the mystery, they add to it, because they make us question what is real and make us see the divine patterns in natural forms.
The "Monte" at the back of the scene but exactly at the center of the panel and exactly halfway between the two protagonists is also meant to contribute to the mystery at the heart of the painting.
It is shrouded in cloud, but we still understand it to be another "Monte", the Monte Oliveto where the nunnery was and probably also the Mount of Olives at the end of Christ's life just before he is arrested and killed. The cypress tree and the sarcophagus painted directly beneath it, both symbols of death, are here to remind the viewer of the end of life in the middle of a painting about the beginning of life. "I am the beginning and the end," Christ said, and here the alpha and omega are explicitly rendered.
The sarcophagus is a sculpted feast of animal claw feet, acanthus leaves, garland and shell. But did Leonardo or Verrochio paint this part of the painting?
Which brings us to four more things to note:
1) ATTRIBUTION of the ARTIST -Since Leonardo was still in Verrocchio's studio as a pupil during this period, it is possible that some of the painting is begun by Verrocchio, particularly the sarcophagus, while Leonardo is certainly responsible for other areas, such as the hair of the Madonna and the graceful figure and face of the Angel. The sarcophagus, as has been pointed out by other scholars, resembles the bronze sarcophagus tomb by Verrocchio in San Lorenzo in Florence.
2) DELICACY - Everything in this painting is handled with delicacy, but there are several sections where that delicacy is most evident. The way the Angel holds the lilies with one hand and blesses the Virgin with the other is painted with the greatest of delicacy.
The Angel keeps a distance from the Virgin and lands with the gracefulness of a dancer kneeling to request a dance from the Virgin. The way the see-through veil falls over the lectern and under the Bible is treated with greatest delicacy; the see-through veil may be another visual reminder of the mysterious state of the Virgin; impenetrable and yet penetrated by God.
The way the Virgin places her right hand on the page of the Bible where she has been reading, while lifting her left hand up as she faces the Angel directly is handled by the painter with another delicacy. The fingers of the right hand are drawn as separate elements and are placed in such a graceful, light touch, that she seems to be a ballerina placing her hands into the dance.
3) THE STAGE OF THE ANNUNCIATION - the gesture of the Virgin's hands indicates the stage of the Annunciation narrative being played out here. (See Michael Baxandall for the 5 stages of the Annunciation linked to the biblical text.) She points to the place where she was reading and lifts her left hand to address the Angel directly; she also looks directly at the Angel.
This placement of hand and head clearly indicates the INQUIRY Stage of the Annunciation story. She is not afraid (FEAR STAGE), she is not reflecting by looking down (REFLECTION STAGE), she is not accepting with hands crossed over chest (ACCEPTANCE STAGE). She is asking him, "How shall this be, seeing I know not a man?" Her question hangs in the air between the Virgin and Angel.
Since Leonardo's entire life was consumed with INQUIRY, the choice of Annunciation stage is most likely his. He was greedy to know as much about life as he could during his own stay on earth. That he should paint this scene as a question rather than an answer is indicative of his attitude toward all of Nature. That some questions can never be answered fully, that life remains ultimately a mystery, is what, towards the end of his life, gives him frustration.
4) ANNUNCIATION for a NUNNERY - It might seem strange to hang a painting about pregnancy in a place where pregnancy is forbidden. Why would the subject of the Annunciation have been appropriate for a nunnery, in spite of the fact that it depicts the moment of conception for Mary? In the story told in Luke, at the very end Mary says, "Behold the handmaid of the Lord; be it unto me according to Thy word." Her submission to the will of God would have served as a model for the nuns in the Benedictine abbey church where it was originally.
This particular Annunciation is most appropriate for a nunnery because she is asking how she could be pregnant if she hasn't ever slept with a man. Since the nuns were supposed to follow her example, their own sexual innocence could be expressed through the gesture of Leonardo's Virgin. Leonardo also makes the Virgin's penetration by God so beautiful that it would have appealed to the aesthetic sensitivities of cloistered nuns who devoted their lives to marrying God.
The question posed here, then, in the figures of the Angel and the Virgin rendered by Leonardo, is more visually satisfying than any answer.
Sometime in the 1470's Leonardo da Vinci painted an Annunciation for a nunnery in Florence; it is now in the Uffizi Gallery:
This rectangular painting is said to have come from the church of San Bartolommeo connected to a Benedictine nunnery on the other side of the Arno from the Duomo in Florence.
The nunnery was up on a hill above Porta San Frediano, the hill called Monte Oliveto because it was full of olive trees. (Monte Oliveto and the church still exist in Florence; from the Via Pisana follow the Via Monte Oliveto up the hill; it will wind around a grove of olive trees.)
But back to our painting. Throughout the Middle Ages and Renaissance Mary is known as the "porta clausa," the "closed door" and as the "hortus conclusus," the "enclosed garden."
Visual references to both those Latin metaphors can be found in Leonardo's painting. Where is the "porta clausa?" The door next to Mary on the right is "open" to reveal her bedroom, complete with bed, a domestic place of conception. The image of the red bed evokes the emotional intensity of her moment of pregnancy, but the open door there is not "closed."
Behind her body, though, are two impenetrable walls with quoins that come together to form a "porta clausa" for the phrase that refers to Mary's virginity. She sits at the juncture of those walls, enclosed by them. She is a closed door in this corner.
The Angel Gabriel, who arrives on uplifted wings and bended knees to announce to Mary that she will be pregnant with Christ by God, alights on a garden carpeted with botanically-correct flowers and plants which are in full bloom. (A recent book on Leonardo's flowers (2013, Aracne) by Giovanni Gestri - I Fiori di Leonardo details the accuracy of the artist as botanical observer.)
Mary and the Angel appear together in this "enclosed garden," "hortus conclusus." Behind the angel and Madonna is a low gray parapet which "encloses" the "garden." That the enclosure is only broken where the Angel holds forth lilies in bloom may suggest to the viewer that she is impenetrable except by God.
Lilies are signs of purity because they are white flowers, but the lilies held by the Angel are open and full, signs of fertility and ripeness. The coming together of fertility and inviolability as expressed by Leonardo happens in the most natural of scenes, outdoors in the enclosed garden.
Normally 15th-century Annunciation scenes have either God the Father flying in with angels in the sky or the dove of the Holy Spirit flying in as Mary hears the words of the Angel. It was said that as soon as the Angel's words reached her ear that she was impregnated. (See blog entry on Simone Martini's Annunciation, also in the Uffizi.) In Leonardo's Annunciation the only thing to appear above the heads of the main protagonists is a cloud with edges touched with light. But are we meant to see the face of God in the shadows of that cloud? are we meant to see an angel? or is the cloud the dove with outstretched wings? Leonardo makes the cloud deliberately mysterious and indefinite and yet part of Nature.
In his notebooks Leonardo studies nature in drawings and comments. God was present everywhere for him, in the cypresses behind the wall, in the lake beyond the garden, in the clouds that block our view of the mountain in the background and in the cloud which may form the shapes of the Deity.
The artist respects the tradition that maintains that Angel Gabriel had wings, but his wings are based on drawings Leonardo made himself of actual birds which he recorded.
Since Nature was his Deity (we rarely see him speak of holy figures in his writings), we see the divinity rendered by the artist here in the natural forms he observed. But the more he studied Nature, the more he realized how much of it was unfathomable, mysterious. In the background is the smoky atmosphere, the "sfumato" for which he is famous, the indefinite contours of things in the distance, especially the outlines of the mountain at the back. Leonardo chooses to represent this great divine mystery as the interaction of human beings with the Deity in Nature. His botanically-correct flowers, then, don't reduce the mystery, they add to it, because they make us question what is real and make us see the divine patterns in natural forms.
The "Monte" at the back of the scene but exactly at the center of the panel and exactly halfway between the two protagonists is also meant to contribute to the mystery at the heart of the painting.
It is shrouded in cloud, but we still understand it to be another "Monte", the Monte Oliveto where the nunnery was and probably also the Mount of Olives at the end of Christ's life just before he is arrested and killed. The cypress tree and the sarcophagus painted directly beneath it, both symbols of death, are here to remind the viewer of the end of life in the middle of a painting about the beginning of life. "I am the beginning and the end," Christ said, and here the alpha and omega are explicitly rendered.
The sarcophagus is a sculpted feast of animal claw feet, acanthus leaves, garland and shell. But did Leonardo or Verrochio paint this part of the painting?
Which brings us to four more things to note:
1) ATTRIBUTION of the ARTIST -Since Leonardo was still in Verrocchio's studio as a pupil during this period, it is possible that some of the painting is begun by Verrocchio, particularly the sarcophagus, while Leonardo is certainly responsible for other areas, such as the hair of the Madonna and the graceful figure and face of the Angel. The sarcophagus, as has been pointed out by other scholars, resembles the bronze sarcophagus tomb by Verrocchio in San Lorenzo in Florence.
2) DELICACY - Everything in this painting is handled with delicacy, but there are several sections where that delicacy is most evident. The way the Angel holds the lilies with one hand and blesses the Virgin with the other is painted with the greatest of delicacy.
The Angel keeps a distance from the Virgin and lands with the gracefulness of a dancer kneeling to request a dance from the Virgin. The way the see-through veil falls over the lectern and under the Bible is treated with greatest delicacy; the see-through veil may be another visual reminder of the mysterious state of the Virgin; impenetrable and yet penetrated by God.
The way the Virgin places her right hand on the page of the Bible where she has been reading, while lifting her left hand up as she faces the Angel directly is handled by the painter with another delicacy. The fingers of the right hand are drawn as separate elements and are placed in such a graceful, light touch, that she seems to be a ballerina placing her hands into the dance.
3) THE STAGE OF THE ANNUNCIATION - the gesture of the Virgin's hands indicates the stage of the Annunciation narrative being played out here. (See Michael Baxandall for the 5 stages of the Annunciation linked to the biblical text.) She points to the place where she was reading and lifts her left hand to address the Angel directly; she also looks directly at the Angel.
This placement of hand and head clearly indicates the INQUIRY Stage of the Annunciation story. She is not afraid (FEAR STAGE), she is not reflecting by looking down (REFLECTION STAGE), she is not accepting with hands crossed over chest (ACCEPTANCE STAGE). She is asking him, "How shall this be, seeing I know not a man?" Her question hangs in the air between the Virgin and Angel.
Since Leonardo's entire life was consumed with INQUIRY, the choice of Annunciation stage is most likely his. He was greedy to know as much about life as he could during his own stay on earth. That he should paint this scene as a question rather than an answer is indicative of his attitude toward all of Nature. That some questions can never be answered fully, that life remains ultimately a mystery, is what, towards the end of his life, gives him frustration.
4) ANNUNCIATION for a NUNNERY - It might seem strange to hang a painting about pregnancy in a place where pregnancy is forbidden. Why would the subject of the Annunciation have been appropriate for a nunnery, in spite of the fact that it depicts the moment of conception for Mary? In the story told in Luke, at the very end Mary says, "Behold the handmaid of the Lord; be it unto me according to Thy word." Her submission to the will of God would have served as a model for the nuns in the Benedictine abbey church where it was originally.
This particular Annunciation is most appropriate for a nunnery because she is asking how she could be pregnant if she hasn't ever slept with a man. Since the nuns were supposed to follow her example, their own sexual innocence could be expressed through the gesture of Leonardo's Virgin. Leonardo also makes the Virgin's penetration by God so beautiful that it would have appealed to the aesthetic sensitivities of cloistered nuns who devoted their lives to marrying God.
The question posed here, then, in the figures of the Angel and the Virgin rendered by Leonardo, is more visually satisfying than any answer.
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