
Masaccio
1401–1428 · Republic of Florence · Italian Renaissance
The story
Masaccio had barely six years as a working painter, yet he changed the direction of Florentine art before he turned twenty-seven. Born Tommaso di Ser Giovanni in 1401 near Florence, he gave his figures a solid, three-dimensional weight and used light and shadow to build believable space in a way Florentine painting had not shown before him.
His major work is the fresco cycle in the Brancacci Chapel of Santa Maria del Carmine, begun around 1424 alongside the older painter Masolino and left unfinished when Masaccio was called to Rome. Scenes like The Tribute Money and The Expulsion from the Garden of Eden use a single consistent light source and correct linear perspective to make saints and sinners look like they occupy the same physical room as the viewer, a sharp departure from the flatter, more decorative Gothic style still common at the time.
Masaccio died in Rome in the autumn of 1428, not yet twenty-seven, the exact cause unrecorded though plague is the likeliest explanation. For decades afterward, young painters including Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo went to the Brancacci Chapel specifically to study and copy his frescoes, treating them as a working textbook for how to paint the human body.
Works
21 works
CrucifixionMasaccio, 1426
Virgin and Child with Saint AnneMasaccio, 1424
San Giovenale TriptychMasaccio, 1422
Desco da partoMasaccio, 1427
Madonna and ChildMasaccio, 1426
Saint PaulMasaccio, 1426
St. Peter Healing the Sick with His ShadowMasaccio, 1425
Carnesecchi TriptychMasaccio, 1423
Raising of the Son of Teophilus and St. Peter EnthronedMasaccio, 1427
The Distribution of Alms and Death of AnaniasMasaccio, 1425
A Bearded Carmelite SaintMasaccio, 1426
A Beardless Carmelite SaintMasaccio, 1426
The Decapitation of Saint John the BaptistMasaccio, 1426
Altar predella; Right panel: The parricide of St. Julian - The miracle of St. Nicholas of BariMasaccio, 1426
Madonna CasiniMasaccio, 1426
Saint AndrewMasaccio, 1426
Saint AugustineMasaccio, 1426
Saint JeromeMasaccio, 1426
Saints Jerome and John the BaptistMasaccio, 1428
The Adoration of the MagiMasaccio, 1426
The Crucifixion of Saint PeterMasaccio, 1426