It is a commonplace, but nonetheless true, that the best-known artists are often the least understood. Generations of admirers cultivate an impression of the artist and his works that is frequently anecdotal and rarely revised or questioned, even though it may have been formu-lated in a period in which the biases and preferences were different from our own. So it has long been with Fra Angelico, who was among the earliest--if not the very first--Italian Renaissance painters to be restored to the canon of greatness after centuries of neglect in the English-, French-, and German-speaking world.
It is a commonplace, but nonetheless true, that the best-known artists are often the least understood. Generations of admirers cultivate an impression of the artist and his works that is frequently anecdotal and rarely revised or questioned, even though it may have been formu-lated in a period in which the biases and preferences were different from our own. So it has long been with Fra Angelico, who was among the earliest--if not the very first--Italian Renaissance painters to be restored to the canon of greatness after centuries of neglect in the English-, French-, and German-speaking world. Much of the nineteenth-century revival of interest in the Pictor Angelicus was founded upon the very evident and very powerful spiritual content of his paint-ings: legend described him as a humble and saintly friar who never picked up his brushes without praying first, and who shed tears whenever he painted a crucifix. This is the image of Fra Angelico that reigned in the popular imagination up through the time of the last (and only) monographic exhibi-tion dedicated to the artist--held in Florence in I955, to com- memorate the fifth centennial of his death in I455--and that may still be found in textbooks and studies published more recently. Indeed, although he had long been known as the Blessed Angelico--Beato Angelico, in Italian--his official beatification by Pope John Paul II in I984 was the climax of a movement that began almost immediately after the artist's death and that could be said to have gathered nothing if not momentum over the succeeding five hundred years.
Sponsor's Statement
Director's Foreword
Acknowledgments
Lenders to the Exhibition
I. FRA ANGELICO: THE EARLY WORKS
(ABOUT I4IO--2I) Laurence Kanter
CATALOGUE I--4 Laurence Kanter
II. PILGRIMS AND DESERT FATHERS:
DOMINICAN SPIRITUALITY AND THE
HOLY LAND Pia Palladino
CATALOGUE 5--9 Pia Palladino, Victor M. Schmidt,
Laurence Kanter
III. A VELVET REVOLUTION:
FRA ANGELICO'S HIGH ALTARPIECE
FOR SAN DOMENICO IN FIESOLE
Anneke de Vries
CATALOGUE 1O--12 Laurence Kanter
IV. FRA ANGELICO: A DECADE OF
TRANSITION (1422-32) Laurence Kanter
CATALOGUE 13--27 Laurence Kanter, Pia Palladino
V. FRA ANGELICO: ARTISTIC MATURITY
AND LATE CAREER (1433-55) Laurence Kanter
CATALOGUE 28--33 Laurence Kanter, Pia Palladino
VI. THE FRESCOES BY FRA ANGELICO
AT SAN MARCO Magnolia Scudieri
CATALOGUE 34--35 Laurence Kanter
VII. FRA ANGELICO: A FLORENTINE
PAINTER IN "ROMA FELIX"
Carl Brandon Strehlke
CATAf.OGUE 36--39 Laurence Kanter, Pia Palladino
VIII. BATTISTA DI BIAGIO SANGUIGNI
AND ZANOBI STROZZI Laurence Kanter
CATALOGUE 40--51 Laurence Kanter, Pia Palladino
IX. FRANCESCO DISTEFANO, CALLED
PESELLINO Laurence, Kanter
CATALOGUE 52--56 Laurence Kanter
X. GIOVANNI DI CONSALVO AND THE
MASTER OF THE SHERMAN PREDELLA
Laurence Kanter
CATALOGUE 57--58 Laurence Kanter
XI. BENOZZO GOZZOL! (BENOZZO DI
LESE DI SANDRO) Pia Palladino
CATALOGUE 59--61 Pia Palladino
Appendix
Bibliography
Index
Photograph Credits