Adoration of the Magi (Lorenzo Monaco)

The Coronation of the Virgin
Artist Lorenzo Monaco
Year 1420-1422
Type Tempera on panel
Dimensions 115 cm × 183 cm (45 in × 72 in)
Location Uffizi Gallery, Florence

The Adoration of the Magi is a tempera on panel painting by the Italian late Gothic artist Lorenzo Monaco, now housed in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence.

History

The painting is known by a rather complete documentation. It was executed by Lorenzo with the help of three assistants, and, despite the reduced size, it was paid the huge sum of 182 florins. According to some hints in Giorgio Vasari's Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, it could have been executed for the church of Sant'Egidio in Florence, when it was reconsecrated by Pope Martin V.

Later it is documented in a room facing the cloister of the monastery of San Marco, where it was seen by Fra Angelico. A source from 1810 reports how the work was initially attributed to Fra Angelico himself.

It was restored in 1995.

Description

The painting includes a large composition with a rather reduced use of the gilted background, a typical element of most Lorenzo's works. The upper part is in the form of a frame creating a triptych.

On the left is portrayed the nativity scene, within an architecture showing Lorenzo's refusal of the contemporary introduction of geometrical perspective in art. The Madonna, wearing a dark blue garment with three stars (symbols of virginity), is sitting on a stone and showing the child to the spectators. St. Joseph is sitting in the lower left corner and looking upwards.

The centre and right scenes are occupied by the Magi's procession. Differently from the Gospel tradition, they are not all portrayed as old men, but with three different ages symbolizing the ages of man. Their followers include a variety of ethnicities, from the Moors to the Tatars, as well as animals such as hounds and camels. In the upper part is a landscape of Giottoesque inspiration. The garments of the standing Magi and the one next to him have writes in Arabic.

In the cusps are a Blessing Redemeer and, in the middle, two prophets. In the 15th century between the cusps were added two further prophets and an Annunciation, partly executed by Cosimo Rosselli.

Sources