FRA ANGELICO'S CRUCIFIXION – AN ITALIAN RENAISSANCE MASTERPIECE SAVED FOR THE PUBLIC

The Ashmolean has saved an Italian Renaissance masterpiece for the public

We are delighted to announce that the Ashmolean Museum has been successful in its recent campaign to save an early Crucifixion by Fra Angelico for the public.

This rare and important work has now joined the Ashmolean's permanent collection, and we look forward to putting it on public display in the coming weeks. More information about this remarkable acquisition can be found in our press release here.

Please note Fra Angelico's 'Crucifixion' is not on public display yet. The painting will go on display in the Ashmolean's Early Italian Art Gallery from early December. Watch this space.

 

Director Xa Sturgis admiring the newly-acquired Fra Angelico painting of The Crucifixion at the press unveiling on the day it arrived at the Museum -

Director Xa Sturgis with the newly-acquired Fra Angelico masterpiece, which goes on show in December © Ian Wallman, 2024

'I am thrilled that millions of visitors who come through our doors will now be able to enjoy this beautiful, moving and important work'

Dr Xa Sturgis CBE, Director of the Ashmolean

This acquisition was made possible thanks to exceptional support from:

The Lord Lupton CBE
The National Heritage Memorial Fund
David and Molly Lowell Borthwick
Art Fund
The Headley Trust
The Emmett Family
Barrie and Deedee Wigmore
John Booth CVO
Dr Anthea Hume
Patrons of the Ashmolean Museum
Lord and Lady Sassoon
Ian and Caroline Laing

And the generosity of:

In memory of David Boyle
Mrs Rosamond Brown
Henry Oldfield Trust
Christian Levett
Chris Rokos
The Fernside Trust
Denys and Victoria Firth
Ruddock Foundation for the Arts
Daniel Katz Gallery
The Lady Heseltine
Gillian Berg
Catherine Lewis Foundation
The Eddie Dinshaw Foundation
In the memory of Anthea Gibson
Fabrizio Moretti
Park Charitable Trust
Rockcliffe Charitable Trust
The Society of Dilettanti Charitable Trust
Omnia Art Ltd.

With additional thanks to:

Nicholas Barber CBE, David & Lexi Young Charitable Trust, Lord Faringdon Charitable Trust, Michael and Sue Pragnell, Francis Russell, Sir Martin Smith and Lady Smith OBE, Cristina and Nicholas White, John and Margaret Leighfield, Dame Helen Ghosh, Sir David Scholey, The British Italian Society, Mr and Mrs E Leckie, Sue and Sandy Arbuthnot, A friend of Blackfriars, Dr Harry Dickinson, Dame Pippa Harris, Miss Elizabeth Howe OPL, Teresa Krasny, Richard Mayou, Christopher North and Sophie de Brito e Cunha-North, Mr and Mrs Michael Pelham, Adrian Sassoon, Edward Smyth, Mark Stevenson, and those who wish to remain anonymous along with many generous others. 

With special thanks to Art Fund for its exceptional support to close the campaign in its final days.

 

About the painting

'The Crucifixion' is one of the earliest surviving panel paintings by Fra Angelico and perhaps the earliest version of the subject he was to return to again and again throughout his life and career.

Painted in the 1420s, 'The Crucifixion with the Virgin, Saint John the Evangelist and the Magdalen' exemplifies the power, beauty and sensitivity for which Fra Angelico would become known, and offers key insights into his painterly style and the development of European painting more broadly.

 

The Crucifixion with the Virgin, Saint John the Evangelist and the Magdalen, Fra Angelico, early 1420s, tempera on gold ground panel

The Crucifixion with the Virgin, Saint John the Evangelist and the Magdalen, Fra Angelico, early 1420s, tempera on gold ground panel © 2023 Christie’s Images Limited

Fra Angelico at the Ashmolean

The Ashmolean houses an extensive Italian Renaissance collection that includes important pieces by Raphael, Michelangelo and Uccello, as well as a rare, later work by Fra Angelico and his studio: a triptych of the Virgin and Child.

There are very few major paintings by Fra Angelico in public collections in the UK, and no complete works by the artist – the National Gallery and the Courtauld Gallery only hold fragments of larger altarpieces in their collections.
 

The Virgin and Child with Angels and a Dominican Saint, 1450–1455, Triptych painting, Fra Angelico

The Virgin and Child with Angels and a Dominican Saint, Fra Angelico, 1450–1455. Ashmolean Museum

 

Now that the acquisition has been successful, it makes the Ashmolean the only museum in the country where visitors will be able to witness Fra Angelico’s development over the course of his career. The Crucifixion will complement and significantly enhance the Museum’s important collection of Early Italian religious works.

 

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