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Virgin and the Dead Christ with the Ascension and Saints

(Italian (Venetian), active about 1440, died after 1500)
1485
Medium/TechniqueCarved and painted wood; tempera and oil on panel
Dimensions236.09 x 198 cm (92 15/16 x 77 15/16 in.)
Credit LineGift of Quincy Adams Shaw
Accession number01.4.1-10
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsPaintings
Collections
Description
This monumental altarpiece is distinctive both because it weaves together painting and sculpture and because it is nearly intact, including the ornate gothic frame. In the lower tier, the presence of saints Benedict (far left) and Scholastica (far right), founders of the Benedictine Order, indicate that the altarpiece was created for a Benedictine monastery. In the center is a carved Pietà, an image of the Virgin holding her dead son in her lap. Vivarini painted the altarpiece in Venice and shipped it to Dalmatia, on the coast of Croatia. The Gothic taste-seen in the wiry saints, the lavish carving and gilding, and the pointed arches of the frame-lingered longer in Venice and its colonies than in more progressive cities such as Florence.
InscriptionsSigned and dated below central Pietá on the base of the sculpture: FACTVM VENETIIS PER BARTOLOMEVM VIVARINVM DE MVRIANO PINXIT 1485.
Provenance1485, painted for the church of St. Andrew, Rab, Croatia; 1876, removed from the church and sold in Venice [see note 1], probably to Quincy Adams Shaw (b. 1825 - d. 1908), Boston [see note 2]; 1901, gift of Quincy Adams Shaw to the MFA. (Accession Date: January 9, 1901)

NOTES: [1] The altarpiece was described as in situ by Rudolf Eitelberger von Edelberg, "Die mittelalterlichen Kunstdenkmale Dalmatiens," Jahrbuch der Kaiserl. Konigl. Central-zur Erforschung und Erhaltung der Baudenkmale 4-5 (1860): 156-57. It was removed in 1876 and sold in Venice, according to Ivo Baric, Kulturni Kapital Rapske Bastine (Rab, 2001), pp. 52-53. Vladislav Brusic, Otok Rab (n.p., 1920), pp. 157-58, states that the altarpiece remained at the church until 1876, and erroneously gives its current location as the Accademia, Venice. When it was removed, the altarpiece was replaced by a copy. [2] Shaw first lent the altarpiece to the MFA in 1876.
Saint Mary Magdalen
Bartolomeo Vivarini
about 1480-90
The Virgin Annunciate
Neroccio di Bartolomeo de'Landi
about 1477–80 (?)
Restricted
Fra Carnevale (Bartolomeo di Giovanni Corradini)
about 1467
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Bramantino (Bartolomeo Suardi)
about 1485–90
Story of Psyche
Jacopo del Sellaio
about 1490
Scenes from the Life of the Virgin and Life of Christ
Unidentified artist, Russian (Palekh School), 18th century
Christ Carrying the Cross
Francesco Rizzo da Santacroce
15th–early 16th century
Virgin and Child; Coronation of the Virgin
Domenico Ghirlandaio
early 1480s
The Holy Family
Giovanni Battista Bertucci
Coronation of the Virgin with the Holy Trinity
Unidentified artist, Austrian (Tyrol), first quarter 15th century
Conservation Status: Before Treatment
Rueland Frueauf, the Elder
1506