The Annunciation thumbnail 1
The Annunciation thumbnail 2
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Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
British Galleries, Room 58b

The Annunciation

Painting
1470-1490 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Object Type
Solid, lower panels were a common feature of church screens in East Anglia. Usually they were painted in rich colours and elaborately gilded. This panel is typical of such late 15th-century church decoration in its combination of religious imagery with intricate patterns and naturalistic detail.

Historical Associations
The face and hands of the Virgin Mary and the figure of Christ were almost certainly defaced after the Reformation which was established in England after Henry VIII (ruled 1509-1547) broke with Papal authority in 1534. Religious objects were either removed or else modified to rid them of their associations with Roman Catholic worship. The churches of East Anglia were also cleansed during the Civil War (1642-1646) on the orders of the 2nd Earl of Manchester. This included the modification of images in wood and glass.

Ownership & Use
The panel includes a portrait of a friar. His presence in the image suggests that he could have been the donor, the person who ordered the work. Paintings with donor portraits were usually commissioned in thanksgiving or commemoration. They signified the patron's piety and devotion, as well as their wealth and status in society.

Subjects Depicted
To the right of the enthroned Virgin Mary is a vase of lilies, an image commonly associated with the Annunciation. Lilies also symbolised purity and were therefore an attribute of the Virgin. Amongst the stems of the flowers is a figure of Christ crucified. The use of this motif in this position was characteristically English. A dove by the Virgin's head represents the Holy Spirit. The seascape above the throne's canopy may refer to one of the Virgin's titles, 'Star of the Sea', although this is more usually represented by a star on her cloak.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleThe Annunciation (generic title)
Materials and techniques
oil on oak panel
Brief description
Painting of The Annunciation, Anonymous English, 1470-1490
Physical description
Panel showing the Virgin, dressed in a blue mantle over a red robe with stylized gold flowers, standing beneath a canopy with gold brocaded back. On a desk is a scroll inscribed `Ecce ancilla do[mini]' On the right is a kneeling figure of the donor, a Grey Friar, named Michael; a scroll issuing from his mouth inscribed: 'Miseratrix a[n]i[m]e mychyll ab hoste protege' Above is a pot of lilies with a figure of Christ crucified among the stems; also, in a rayed border, is a a figure of the First Person of the Trinity; near the head of the Virgin is the Dove; on the top of the panel is an estuary or sea-shore with ships. The floor is tiled.
The face and hands of the Virgin and the figures of the Persons of the Trinity have been defaced
Dimensions
  • Height: 110.5cm
  • Width: 45.6cm
  • Depth: 1cm
Dimensions checked: Measured; 14/09/1999 by nh
Style
Production typeunique
Marks and inscriptions
  • Ecce ancilla do[mini] (Inscription; decoration; Latin)
    Translation
    Behold the Handmaid of the Lord
  • Miseratrix a[n]i[m]e mychyll ab hoste protege (Inscription; decoration)
    Translation
    Thou [i.e. the Virgin] who art merciful to my soul protect Michael from the Enemy [i.e.Satan]
Gallery label
  • This panel, from a brightly painted screen shows a traditional composition of the Virgin Mary enthroned. It has been adapted to represent the Annunciation by the addition of the words 'Ecce ancilla domini' ('Behold the angel [sic] of the Lord'). The careful erasing of the face may be an effort to rob a traditional image of its power while leaving it in its original position.
  • British Galleries: This panel, which originally decorated a church screen, shows a traditional composition of the Virgin Mary enthroned, adapted to represent the Annunciation. Someone has scratched away Mary's face and a small figure of Christ crucified among lilies on the right hand side. The careful damage may be an effort to rob a traditional image of its power while leaving it in its original position.(27/03/2003)
Credit line
Given by A. H. Fass
Object history
Given by A. H. Fass, 1921
The face and hands of the Virgin and the figures of the Persons of the Trinity have been defaced, presumably during the Reformation when images were often repainted or modified. In the 19th C the panel was in the collection of Sir Henry Bunbury who removed it from Holy Innocents, Great Barton, Suffolk, some time before 1850.
H. Smith in the Antiquaries Journal, 1921, suggested that the seascape in the spandrel at the top of the panel might indicate that painting was made for the Franciscan House at Dunwich. Nicholas Rogers (in a letter to V&A 1979) has suggested that the work is more likely to have been connected with the house at Babwell. He also claims that the panel is: 'undoubtedly a product of the Bury school, about 1470-90, and may have been painted by a member of the Albreed family'. It might have also been painted at Great Barton, Suffolk, as this panel is from a parclose screen in the north nave aisle of the church there. It shows a traditional composition of the Virgin Mary enthroned. It has been adapted to represent the Annunciation by the addition of the words 'Ecce ancilla domini' ('Behold the Handmaid of the Lord'). The careful erasing of the face may be an effort to rob a traditional image of its power while leaving it in its original position.

Perhaps commissioned by the Friar Michael, shown here

In the Church of the Holy Innocents, Great Barton, Suffolk, before 1850 Probably painted in Suffolk
Production
English School 15th century
Subject depicted
Place depicted
Association
Summary
Object Type
Solid, lower panels were a common feature of church screens in East Anglia. Usually they were painted in rich colours and elaborately gilded. This panel is typical of such late 15th-century church decoration in its combination of religious imagery with intricate patterns and naturalistic detail.

Historical Associations
The face and hands of the Virgin Mary and the figure of Christ were almost certainly defaced after the Reformation which was established in England after Henry VIII (ruled 1509-1547) broke with Papal authority in 1534. Religious objects were either removed or else modified to rid them of their associations with Roman Catholic worship. The churches of East Anglia were also cleansed during the Civil War (1642-1646) on the orders of the 2nd Earl of Manchester. This included the modification of images in wood and glass.

Ownership & Use
The panel includes a portrait of a friar. His presence in the image suggests that he could have been the donor, the person who ordered the work. Paintings with donor portraits were usually commissioned in thanksgiving or commemoration. They signified the patron's piety and devotion, as well as their wealth and status in society.

Subjects Depicted
To the right of the enthroned Virgin Mary is a vase of lilies, an image commonly associated with the Annunciation. Lilies also symbolised purity and were therefore an attribute of the Virgin. Amongst the stems of the flowers is a figure of Christ crucified. The use of this motif in this position was characteristically English. A dove by the Virgin's head represents the Holy Spirit. The seascape above the throne's canopy may refer to one of the Virgin's titles, 'Star of the Sea', although this is more usually represented by a star on her cloak.
Bibliographic references
  • Charles Tracy, English Medieval Furniture & Woodwork, V&A Museum, 1988
  • H. Smith Antiquaries Journal, Vol I 1921 p.300
Collection
Accession number
W.50-1921

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Record createdJanuary 10, 2001
Record URL
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