Crucifixion with Mourners and St Dominic
Crucifixion with Mourners and St Dominic is a fresco fragment by the Italian early Renaissance painter Fra Angelico, executed c. 1435, from the refectory of the Convent of San Domenico, Fiesole, now in the Louvre.[1]
Like the same artist's Coronation of the Virgin from the same convent, it was removed and taken to France after it was suppressed under the Napoleonic occupation. After the Bourbon Restoration, it was one of around a hundred works not to be returned to Italy, nominally due to their dimensions and the difficulties of transporting them.
Christ is shown with his head leaning on his chest (possibly developing studies from below of Masaccio's Pisa Crucifixion). At the centre is Saint Dominic, with the Virgin Mary and John the Evangelist either side of the cross.[2]
References
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- Fiesole Altarpiece (1424–1425)
- The Last Judgment (1425–1430)
- San Pietro Martire Triptych (1428–1429)
- Annunciation (1430–1432)
- Coronation of the Virgin (c. 1432)
- Deposition of Christ (1432–1434)
- Annunciation (c. 1433–1434)
- Tabernacle of the Linaioli (1433–1435)
- Madonna of Humility (1433–1435)
- Coronation of the Virgin (1434–1435)
- Annunciation (before 1435)
- Crucifixion with Mourners and St Dominic (c. 1435)
- Madonna and Child with St Dominic and St Thomas Aquinas (c. 1435)
- Croce al Tempio Lamentation (1436)
- Cortona Triptych (1436–1437)
- Perugia Altarpiece (c. 1437)
- The Annunciation (c. 1440–1445)
- Presentation at the Temple (1438–1440)
- San Marco Altarpiece (1438–1443)
- Adoration of the Magi (c. 1441-1442) (with Benozzo Gozzoli)
- Frescoes in the Niccoline Chapel (1447–1449)
- Adoration of the Magi (c. 1440/1460) (with Filippo Lippi)
- Armadio degli Argenti (1451–1453)
- Virgin Reliquaries (1434) (original drawings by Fra Angelico)
- Benozzo Gozzoli (collaborator)
- Filippo Lippi (collaborator)
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