On view

European Art
Duane Wilder Gallery

The Annunciation,

1560s

Nosadella (Giovanni Francesco Bezzi), Italian, active ca.1549–1571
y1976-25

For Princeton University classes visiting the Museum, Nosadella’s Annunciation continues to spark lively conversations about the artist’s process and use of the oil medium to alter details of the painting. Examining the panel closely, students are amazed to find a ghostlike outline to the right of Mary that reveals the former placement of the archangel Gabriel’s head, and a faint form in the center of the golden light showing the artist’s initial positioning of the dove symbolizing the Holy Spirit. Referred to as pentimenti (from the Italian word pentimento, meaning repentance), such traces of the earlier layers of the painting speak to Nosadella’s practice of revision and correction and remind students of their own iterative methods of studying and learning.

Veronica Maria White, Curator of Teaching and Learning, Princeton University Art Museum

More Context

Handbook Entry

Once considered a work of the Bolognese master Pellegrino Tibaldi, this <em>Annunciation</em> has now been attributed to Giovanni Francesco Bezzi (called Nosadella), also active in Bologna. A drawing in a private collection helps reconstruct its genesis: the angel originally approached the Virgin Mary from the left, but the artist then flipped the draw­ing and showed him approaching from the right, as in the painting. Evidence in the painting also helps document the painter’s earlier intentions. Gabriel’s head was once positioned higher, and the placement of the dove was moved up; the alterations can be seen through ­x-radiographs and in <em>pentimenti</em>. The changes might have been made to accord better with the original setting, which is still unknown, as is the patron. Especially striking in this composition is the attention to believable anatomical rendering and to the Virgin Mary’s pivoting movement to look over her shoulder at the angel. In Italian Annunciation scenes, the angel usually approaches the Virgin Mary from the left. Michelangelo had experimented with an Annunciation from the right, however, in drawings made about 1549 to be executed in paintings by his friend Marcello Venusti; a Michelangelo drawing in the British Museum is especially close to the work shown here, as is the painting based on it, in the Palazzo Barberini, Rome. Since Michelangelo died in 1564, it may be that Nosadella wished to honor the master in this <em>Annunciation</em>, in which muscular, acrobatic cherubs recall the spirit of some of Michelangelo’s Herculean babies.

More About This Object

Information

Title
The Annunciation
Dates

1560s

Medium
Oil on wood panel
Dimensions
107.3 × 78.8 cm (42 1/4 × 31 in.) frame: 132.7 × 104.5 × 8.9 cm (52 1/4 × 41 1/8 × 3 1/2 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Fowler McCormick, Class of 1921, Fund
Object Number
y1976-25
Culture
Materials

Cardinal Benedetto Giustiniani, Rome (after around 1610–1621; no. 134 in inventory of 1621; by descent to Cardinal Vincenzo); Cardinal Vincenzo Giustiniani, Rome (no. 59 in inventory of 1638; by descent to Giustiniani family); Giustiniani family, Rome (in 1673); art market, Vaduz, Liechtenstein (in 1975; sold to Colnaghi); Colnaghi, London (1975–76); Richard Feigen, New York (in 1976; sold to Princeton University Art Museum).