English

The Annunciation

Hans Memling Netherlandish
1480–89
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 953
Memling modeled this Annunciation on the left wing of Rogier van der Weyden’s Saint Columba Altarpiece (now in Munich), but his innovative rendition portrays the Virgin swooning and supported by two angels, rather than kneeling. Like other fifteenth-century Flemish painters working in the wake of Jan van Eyck, Hans Memling cloaked religious imagery in the pictorial language of everyday life, paying close attention to naturalistic detail. This Annunciation takes place in a comfortably appointed bedchamber, though many of the domestic furnishings have symbolic connotations. The carafe of water, through which light passes uncorrupted, and the vase of lilies are symbols of the Virgin's purity, while the empty candleholder signifies her imminent role as bearer of Christ, light of the world. Gabriel's priestly garb alludes to the ritual of the Mass and, therefore, the incarnation of Christ. A soft glowing light falls on the Virgin and suffuses the room, elevating the scene from the realm of the ordinary and signaling the sacred nature of the drama.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: The Annunciation
  • Artist: Hans Memling (Netherlandish, Seligenstadt, active by 1465–died 1494 Bruges)
  • Date: 1480–89
  • Medium: Oil on panel, transferred to canvas
  • Dimensions: 30 1/8 x 21 1/2 in. (76.5 x 54.6 cm)
  • Classification: Paintings
  • Credit Line: Robert Lehman Collection, 1975
  • Object Number: 1975.1.113
  • Curatorial Department: The Robert Lehman Collection

Audio

Cover Image for 4725. The Annunciation, Part 1

4725. The Annunciation, Part 1

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AMORY: This Annunciation was painted by Hans Memling a German-born artist who worked in Bruges and painted in the Netherlandish style. Here is Maryan Ainsworth, Curator of European Paintings, who speaks about Gabriel’s Annunciation to the Virgin Mary.

AINSWORTH: Gabriel has just come onto the scene, to announce that she will be the mother of the son of god, and she pauses from her reading, slightly rising to her feet, but then swooning with the news. The fact that the incarnation has already taken place seems to be suggested by the dove who circles above her, and by her rather full belly, which is accentuated in fact by her pose, by her swooning.

AMORY: Gabriel is dressed in ecclesiastical attire, wearing a very elaborate cope. If you look near his right elbow, you’ll notice an eagle, the symbol of Saint John the Evangelist.

AINSWORTH: John the Evangelist did not in fact write about the Annunciation. But this symbol does seem to follow the meaning of his words in the Gospels, where he says “And the Word was Made Flesh.” And that’s really what this painting is about. It’s about the inception of the incarnation, the beginning of it all, and the making flesh of what was spiritual.

AMORY: To hear how Hans Memling—and other Netherlandish painters—achieved such luminous effects in works like this Annunciation, press the play button now.

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