
Fra Angelico
1400–1455 · Republic of Florence · Italian Renaissance
The story
Fra Angelico spent his whole working life inside the Dominican order, and it shaped everything he painted. Born Guido di Pietro around 1395 near Fiesole, he joined the convent of San Domenico there by 1423, taking the name Fra Giovanni; "Angelico," meaning angelic, was a nickname attached to him after his death for the luminous devotional quality of his work.
His major achievement came at the convent of San Marco in Florence, rebuilt in the 1440s with funding from the Medici banker Cosimo de' Medici. Angelico and his workshop covered its corridors and some fifty individual friars' cells with frescoes, each one sized and placed to match the cell's bed and window, meant to be seen by a single friar at prayer rather than by any public audience.
He never rose above the rank of ordinary friar and continued painting commissions in Rome for popes Eugene IV and Nicholas V into his final years, dying there in 1455. In 1982 Pope John Paul II beatified him, and two years later named him the patron of Catholic artists.
Works
46 works
St Lawrence Distributing AlmsFra Angelico, 1447
ThebaidFra Angelico, 1418
Bosco ai Frati AltarpieceFra Angelico, 1450
Christ crowned with thornsFra Angelico, 1430
Christ on the Cross, the Virgin, Saint John the Evangelist, and Cardinal TorquemadaFra Angelico, 1440
Communion of the ApostlesFra Angelico, 1440
Compagnia di San Francesco altarpieceFra Angelico, 1430
Crucifixion of Saints Cosmas and DamianFra Angelico, 1439
Entombment of ChristFra Angelico, 1443
Lunette of the east wall in Niccoline ChapelFra Angelico, 1447
Lunette of the west wall in Niccoline ChapelFra Angelico, 1447
Madonna with childFra Angelico, 1435
Saint Cosmas and Saint Damian SalvagedFra Angelico, 1443
Saint Dominic adoring the CrucifixionFra Angelico, 1443
Saints Cosmas and Damian and their Brothers Surviving the StakeFra Angelico, 1443
Sepulchring of Saint Cosmas and Saint DamianFra Angelico, 1443
The Healing of Palladia by Saints Cosmas and DamianFra Angelico, 1443
The Naming of Saint John the BaptistFra Angelico, 1428
The Saints Cosmas and Damian with their Brothers before the Proconsul LysiasFra Angelico, 1443
Triptych of the Last Judgment, Ascension, and PentecostFra Angelico, 1447
Triptych: The Last JudgmentFra Angelico, 1450