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Now showing items 11-17 of 17
Annunciation
Jacopo della Quercia, Francesco di Valdambrino, and other Sienese artists made made many of these pairs of large (almost life-size) statues of the the Angel Gabriel and the Virgin Mary, possibly to stand in niches on either ...
Annunciation
These painted wood statues of the Annunciate Virgin and the Angel Gabriel are from the convent of San Francesco in Pisa, which became (after deconsecration) the Museo Civico and then the Museo di San Matteo, where these ...
Annunciation
This painted and gilded low-relief stucco sculpture of the Annunciation was, in a later period, placed with an illusionistic wood intarsia in a carved wooden frame. The relief, likely made by an artist from Northern Italy ...
Annunciation
These glazed terracotta sculptures of the Angel Gabriel and the Annunciate Virgin currently flank another glazed terracotta work depicting God the Father adored by angels, which in turn frames an earlier fresco, thought ...
The Annunciation
This glazed terracotta lunette of the Annunciation is currently immured in the main cloister of the Ospedale degli Innocenti in Florence. Originally, it formed part of a multi-media altarpiece in a chapel of the hospital ...
Annunciation
This sculpture is known as the Cavalcanti Annunciation or Cavalcanti tabernacle, because it was made for the Cavalcanti family chapel in Santa Croce in Florence. Technical examination of the join between the architectural ...
Annunciation
These painted wood sculptures of the Angel Gabriel and the Annunciate Virgin were made around 1320 and are one of the earliest surviving examples of this type of Annunciation pair, which became popular in Tuscany from the ...