The Angel of the Annunciation
1498/1503
Artist, Florentine, active c. 1500


West Building Ground Floor, Gallery G17
Artwork overview
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Medium
stained glass
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Credit Line
-
Dimensions
overall: 199.4 × 78.8 cm (78 1/2 × 31 in.)
framed: 215.9 × 89.54 × 4.76 cm (85 × 35 1/4 × 1 7/8 in.) -
Accession
1942.9.312
Artwork history & notes
Provenance
Church and convent of Cestello (later Santa Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi), Florence, c. 1503-after 1630.[1] Rodolphe Kann [1844/1845-1905], Paris, before 1907;[2] (Duveen Brothers, Inc., London, New York, and Paris);[3] purchased 3 April 1916 by Joseph E. Widener, Elkins Park, Pennsylvania, as Florentine, fifteenth century;[4] inheritance from Estate of Peter A.B. Widener by gift through power of appointment of Joseph E. Widener, Elkins Park, after purchase by funds of the Estate; gift 1942 to NGA.
[1] The provenance from the church of Santa Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi in Florence, first published in the Kann Collection catalogue in 1907, is confirmed by both documents and stylistic evidence. A record of February 1503 in the archive from that church in the Archivio di Stato, Florence, indicates that a priest called Ser Giovanni di Domenico "de vreti" ("of the stained glass windows") was due payment for "two windows made in the choir with figures" (Luchs, Alison, "Origins of the Widener Annunciation Windows," Studies in the History of Art 7 [1975]: especially 89, doc. 5; Florence, Archivio di Stato Compagnie Religiose Soppresse, C.XVIII 502, no. 357, fol. 205.) It indicates Giovanni was to be paid at the same time for a window for the Riccialbani chapel in the church. The Riccialbani window, still in situ and bearing a simple coat of arms of that family in a roundel, has borders whose fruit-cluster and floral designs perfectly match those of the National Gallery windows. See Luchs 1977, 28-30, on the choir chapel, which was altered beyond recognition in 1628, and Luchs 1975 for the removal of the windows and their reinstallation in a new chapter house between 1628 and 1630. The date and circumstances of their removal from this location are unknown. Since the windows next appeared in a French collection, they may have been removed during Napoleon's Italian campaign, when several altarpieces from the church were taken to France. See Everett P. Fahy, Jr., "Les cadres d'origine de retables florentins du Louvre," Revue du Louvre 26, no. 1 (1976): 6-14.
[2] Kann catalogue 1907, 1:15, no. 22.
[3] In a letter of 1 March 1916 to Joseph Widener, Joseph Duveen writes that Duveen Brothers "possess only a two-thirds share" in this window and NGA 1942.9.311; the dealer having the other third appears to have been Wildenstein's (Duveen Brothers Records, accession number 960015, Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles: Series II.I. Collectors' files, 1901-1965; Joseph E. Widener, box 523, folder 6, reel 378; copy in NGA curatorial files).
[4] For an undated photograph of the windows installed in the Raphael Room at Lynnewood Hall see David Alan Brown, Berenson and the Connoisseurship of Italian Painting [exh. cat., National Gallery of Art] (Washington, 1979), 20, fig. 33.
Associated Names
Bibliography
1907
Cataloque de la collection Rodolphe Kann; objets d'art. 2 vols. (Objets d'art by Jules Mannheim) Paris, 1907: 1:15, no. 22, as early sixteenth cetury, after Lorenzo di Credi.
1935
Inventory of the Objects d'Art at Lynnewood Hall, Elkins Park, Pennsylvania, The Estate of the Late P.A.B. Widener. Philadelphia, 1935: 49, as Italian (Florence), fifteenth century, probably designed by Lorenzo di Credi.
1942
Works of Art from the Widener Collection. Foreword by David Finley and John Walker. National Gallery of Art, Washington, 1942: 11, as Florentine 15th Century.
1952
Christensen, Erwin O. Objects of Medieval Art from the Widener Collection. National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 1952: 18.
1965
Marchini, Giuseppe. "Vetri italiani in America." Arte in Europa; scritti di storia dell'arte in onore di Edorado Arslan. 2 vols. Pavia, 1965-1966: 1:431-436.
1975
Luchs, Alison. "Origins of the Widener Annunciation Windows." Studies in the History of Art 7 (1975): 81-89, color repro.
1977
Luchs, Alison. Cestello; a Cistercian Church of the Florentine Renaissance. New York, 1977: 28, 117-119, figs. 88a, b.
1984
Walker, John. National Gallery of Art, Washington. Rev. ed. New York, 1984: 34, color repro. 35.
1985
Luchs, Alison. "Stained Glass Above Renaissance Altars; Figural Windows in Italian Church Architecture from Brunelleschi to Bramante." Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte 48 (1985): 200-204, fig. 24.
1987
Stained Glass before 1700 in American Collections; Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern Seaboard States. Corpus Vitrearum Checklist II. Studies in the History of Art 23, monograph ser. I (1987): color repro. 6, 12, 34.
1991
Kopper, Philip. America's National Gallery of Art: A Gift to the Nation. New York, 1991: 196, color repro.
1993
Distelberger, Rudolf, Alison Luchs, Philippe Verdier, and Timonthy H. Wilson. Western Decorative Arts, Part I: Medieval, Renaissance, and Historicizing Styles including Metalwork, Enamels, and Ceramics. The Collections of the National Gallery of Art Systematic Catalogue. Washington, D.C., 1993: 62-67, color repro. 63.
2000
National Gallery of Art Special Issue. Connaissance des Arts. Paris, 2000:62.
2019
Vignon, Charlotte. Duveen Brothers and the Market for Decorative Arts, 1880-1940. New York, 2019: 232 fig. 86, 277 n. 853.
Wikidata ID
Q62131048