Masolino Da Panicale - Summary of Work

Summary of Work

Section includes external links to works of art.

Complete works
In Florence:

  • Cappella Brancacci: cycle of frescoes in collaboration with Masaccio, 1424.
  • Madonna and Child, Saint Anne and the Angels, collaboration with Masaccio, tempera on wood, 1424, Uffizi, Florence.
  • Madonna dell'Umiltà, tempera on wood, 1430–35, Uffizi.

In Empoli:

  • Cristo in pietà, detached fresco, 1424, Empoli, museum of the Collegiata di Sant'Andrea.
  • Saint Ivo and the Pupils, fresco, 1424, Empoli, Church of Saint Steven.
  • Virgin and Child, fresco, 1424, Empoli, Church of Saint Steven.

In Rome:

  • Fresco commissioned by Branda da Castiglione in the Basilica di San Clemente, Chapel of Sacrament, 1428.
  • Death of the Virgin and Crucifixion, fresco, Pinacoteca Vaticana.

In Castiglione Olona, where his patron was Branda da Castiglioney:

  • Hungarian Landscape in the Palazzo Branda Castiglione.
  • Story of the Virgin (1435) in the Collegiata.
  • Frescoes depicting the Life of St. John the Baptist (1435) in the Baptistery of Castiglione Olona.

In Naples:

  • Miracle of the Snow, ca. 1423, triptych, National Museum and Gallery of Capodimonte.

In France:

  • Scenes from the Legend of Saint Julian the Hospitaller, tempera on wood, 21 x 39 cm, Musée Ingres.

In Germany:

  • Madonna and Child, tempera on wood, Alte Pinakothek.
  • Madonna and Child (1423), tempera on panel in Kunsthalle Bremen.

In the United States:

  • The Annunciation (1425–1430) tempera on wood 148 x 115 cm, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
  • The Archangel Gabriel and The Virgin Annunciate, both ca. 1430, tempera (?) on panel, National Gallery of Art.

Dispersed pieces of works

  • Lateral panels of an altarpiece with The Ascension at the center, from Santa Maria Maggiore, Rome, ca. 1427-28, started by Masaccio and completed by Masolino after his death: Saints John the Evangelist(?) and Martin of Tours, Saints Paul and Peter, Philadelphia Museum of Art; Pope Gregory the Great (?) and Saint Matthias, National Gallery, London; The Ascension National Museum and Gallery of Capodimonte, Naples.

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