This small panel was part of the predella (lower register) of Fra Angelico’s most important altarpiece. Other parts of it are dispersed in various galleries worldwide. It was painted for the church of San Marco in Florence, and was commissioned by Cosimo de’Medici, whose name is echoed in the profession of Sts Cosmas and Damian (Medici means ‘physicians’ in Italian). Fra Angelico is one of the great Florentine Renaissance masters. In 1407 he entered the Dominican monastery of Fiesole, assuming the name of Fra Giovanni. Within a few years he had become the most acclaimed monastic painter in Italy.
ProvenancePart of an altarpiece commissioned for the high altar in the Dominican Church of S. Marco in Florence; collection Lombardi-Baldi, Florence; Mr W. Graham, Burlington House from 1877; purchased, Christie's, London, 1886, Mr W. Graham sale Exhibition HistoryOld Masters Exhibition, Burlington House, 1877
Burlington Fine Arts Club, 1919
The Italian Exhibition, Burlington House, 1930
Quincentenary of Fra Angelico's Death, Cappella Vatican, Vatican, April 1955; San Marco, Florence, May-September 1955
Centenary Exhibition, National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin, October - December 1964
Fra Angelico, Die Muenchner Tafeln und der Hochaltar von San Marco in Florenz, Neue Pinakothek, München, 5 September - 17 November 1996
Fra Angelico, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 26 October 2005 - 29 January 2006
Florence and its Painters: From Giotto to Leonardo da Vinci, Bayerische Staatsgemaldesammlungen, Munich, 18 October 2018 - 03 February 2019
Label TextFra Angelico’s beautiful style of painting was compared to the work of an angel, earning him his nickname which translates as Angelic Brother. He was a Dominican monk, and the foremost painter in early‑Renaissance Florence. This panel depicts the martyrdom of twin brothers Cosmas and Damian in the third century AD. The Christian siblings, and their younger brothers, were condemned to burn at the stake by Lycias, a pagan Roman official. Here, Lycias looks on in shock as the flames miraculously bounce away from the devout brothers and burn their persecutors instead.
