Artwork Page for Death of the Virgin

Details / Information for Death of the Virgin

Death of the Virgin

c. 1400
Measurements
Image: 66 x 53.3 cm (26 x 21 in.); Framed: 74 x 61.5 x 4.5 cm (29 1/8 x 24 3/16 x 1 3/4 in.); Unframed: 71 x 54 cm (27 15/16 x 21 1/4 in.)
Public Domain
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Did You Know?

The artist was named for a painting that was once in the Cistercian monastery of Heiligenkreuz in Austria.

Description

Christ’s apostles visit the Virgin upon her deathbed. Saint Peter, wearing white robes and the papal tiara, performs funerary rites, reciting prayers and sprinkling holy water on the Virgin’s body. Above, angels engraved upon the golden background celebrate the assumption of the Virgin heavenward. Once joined to another panel titled The Death of Saint Clare (National Gallery, Washington, D.C.), this double representation of saintly deaths may have been used in funerary services in the convent of Clarissan nuns for which it was made.
A vertically oriented tempera and oil painting depicts the light-skinned Virgin Mary in blue, lying on a bed draped in red and gold patterned fabric. Twelve apostles with ornate halos surround her. Centrally, a man in white reads from a book. Above, Christ appears in a blue cloud, holding a small figure. In the foreground, two haloed men sit reading; the left wears spectacles. The scene unfolds against a textured gold background.

Death of the Virgin

c. 1400

Master of Heiligenkreuz

(Austrian)
Austria, possibly Bohemia, early 15th Century

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