Condanna di San Lorenzo da parte dell'imperatore Valeriano

Fra Angelico · PD

Condanna di San Lorenzo da parte dell'imperatore Valeriano


Dettagli

Anno
1447
Tecnica
affresco
Tipo
dipinto
Dimensioni
271 × 235 cm

La storia

Around 1447 a new pope, Nicholas V, set about turning a run-down medieval Vatican into a centre of learning, gathering scholars and Greek manuscripts. For his small private chapel he called in Fra Angelico, a Dominican friar already famous for painting as a form of prayer. This wall shows the early Christian deacon Lawrence brought before the Roman emperor Valerian, who sits enthroned and lifts his hand to condemn him. Lawrence wears a deacon's red robe stitched with little flames, a quiet forewarning of his death, since he was said to have been roasted alive on a gridiron. Fra Angelico sets the scene inside cool, measured classical architecture, the kind the pope's humanist circle admired. He worked here with assistants over about two years, and it is among the last great projects of his life.