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Dormition of the Virgin
about 1340–45
Medium/Technique
Tempera on panel
Dimensions
100 x 71.1 cm (39 3/8 x 28 in.)
Credit Line
William Francis Warden Fund, Seth K. Sweetser Fund, The Henry C. and Martha B. Angell Collection, Juliana Cheney Edwards Collection, Gift of Martin Brimmer, and Gift of Reverend and Mrs. Frederick Frothingham, by exchange
Accession Number50.2716
CollectionsEurope
ClassificationsPaintings
Originally part of an altarpiece, this is one of the greatest panel paintings produced in Bohemia during the reign of King Charles IV. According to tradition, the Virgin Mary was not dead but only sleeping during the three days before she was taken up to heaven, an event witnessed by Christ's followers, the twelve Apostles. Here, Christ blesses the recumbent Virgin while holding her diminutive soul. The three figures along the bottom edge probably represent the patrons who commissioned the painting.
ProvenanceBy about 1420, possibly the nobles of Veitmile (Weitmühl), Košátky Castle, Mladá Boleslav, Czech Republic [see note 1]; 15th century, possibly acquired with Košátky Castle by the counts of Kolowrat [see note 2]; by descent within the family to Henry Kolowrat (b. 1897 - d. 1996), Prague, New York and Boston; 1950, sold by Henry Kolowrat to Henry Pearlman (b. 1895 - d. 1974), New York [see note 3]; 1950, probably sold by Henry Pearlman to E. and A. Silberman Galleries, New York [see note 4]; 1950, sold by Silberman to the MFA for $36,000. (Accession Date: June 8, 1950)
NOTES:
[1] The early history of the altarpiece is not documented, but it was suggested by R. Kuchynka, "Obraz smrti Panny Marie v Kosatkach," Památky Archaeologické 33 (1923): pp. 148-149 that it had long been at Košátky Castle, which belonged in the 15th century to the nobles of Veitmile and may have been commissioned by the chronicler Beneš Krabice z Veitmile (Benesch von Weitmühl, d. 1375).
[2] The counts of Kolowrat acquired Kosátky Castle in the late 15th century. In a letter from Henry Kolowrat to Henry Pearlman (January 6, 1950), the painting is said to have been in the possession of his family for about 500 years, though he does not specify how it was acquired. From 1934 to 1939, Kolowrat lent it to the National Museum, Prague (inv. no. OP2110). It was described at Košátky by František Bareš, Soupis památek historických a uměleckých 21 (1905), p. 126, no. 14.
[3] In the letter from Kolowrat to Pearlman (see above, n. 2) the author writes "I am glad to have sold you the Bohemian panel painting, 'Death of the Virgin.'"
[4] The painting was with Silberman by early May, 1950. In an interoffice memorandum from W. G. Constable to George Edgell of the MFA (May 31, 1950), Silberman is said to have acquired the painting fully on May 26.
NOTES:
[1] The early history of the altarpiece is not documented, but it was suggested by R. Kuchynka, "Obraz smrti Panny Marie v Kosatkach," Památky Archaeologické 33 (1923): pp. 148-149 that it had long been at Košátky Castle, which belonged in the 15th century to the nobles of Veitmile and may have been commissioned by the chronicler Beneš Krabice z Veitmile (Benesch von Weitmühl, d. 1375).
[2] The counts of Kolowrat acquired Kosátky Castle in the late 15th century. In a letter from Henry Kolowrat to Henry Pearlman (January 6, 1950), the painting is said to have been in the possession of his family for about 500 years, though he does not specify how it was acquired. From 1934 to 1939, Kolowrat lent it to the National Museum, Prague (inv. no. OP2110). It was described at Košátky by František Bareš, Soupis památek historických a uměleckých 21 (1905), p. 126, no. 14.
[3] In the letter from Kolowrat to Pearlman (see above, n. 2) the author writes "I am glad to have sold you the Bohemian panel painting, 'Death of the Virgin.'"
[4] The painting was with Silberman by early May, 1950. In an interoffice memorandum from W. G. Constable to George Edgell of the MFA (May 31, 1950), Silberman is said to have acquired the painting fully on May 26.