Master Paintings & Sculpture Part I
Master Paintings & Sculpture Part I
Property from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery
Madonna and Child with musician angels
Auction Closed
January 28, 04:44 PM GMT
Estimate
200,000 - 300,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Property from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery
Giovanni di Francesco Toscani
Florence 1372-1430
Madonna and Child with musician angels
tempera on panel, gold ground
painted surface: 35 by 21 in.; 88.9 by 53.3 cm.
with engaged frame: 45 1/2 by 23 1/2 in.; 115.6 by 59.7 cm.
Since the early twentieth century, a stylistically uniform group of paintings has been attributed, by Offner and others, to the anonymous Master of the Griggs Crucifixion, a name derived from the altarpiece at the Metropolitan Museum, New York. The artist was identified with the discovery of a 1423 document recording payment to Giovanni Francesco Toscani for a pair of frescoes clearly belonging to the same oeuvre in the Ardinghelli chapel in Santa Trinità, Florence. Toscani’s primary influence was the sculptor Lorenzo Ghiberti, but he also worked in the International Gothic style and is therefore close to Arcangelo di Cola da Camerino and Rossello di Jacopo Franchi. Offner noted Toscani’s “raw, vigorous personality” and listed his defining characteristics as pale green and pink flesh tones, uniform curly blonde hair, tight mouths, and the nimbus-shaped halo with a pattern resembling Kufic script against a cross-hatched ground.1 All of these features are on display in the Albright-Knox panel, in addition to the charming iconographic additions of the trio of musician angels floating at upper right and the coral necklace worn by the infant Christ, intended as both a protective amulet and possibly a teething toy.
The Madonna is seated on the ground in a position of humility, with an elaborately brocaded red cushion just visible behind her. She holds Jesus on her lap, who sits up and faces the viewer, offering a blessing gesture. His delicate necklace with a red coral pendant was a typical accessory for young children in the Renaissance as it was believed to offer protection. Coral, which is durable but yields slightly to pressure, also served as teething material for babies in this period, though certainly not today. At the upper right a trio of diminutive angels floats toward the Madonna on a cloud, playing, respectively from left, a lute, pipes, and a harp. The angels share the same elongated eyes, tight-lipped mouths and blonde curly hair as the Holy Family and their faces are modeled with the same light green tones in the shadows.
1. See Offner 1933, p. 173.