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Magdalen Master
( fl Florence, c. 126590). Italian painter. One of the most influential artists in 13th-century Florence, he was named by Sirén (1922) after a panel showing a standing figure of St Mary Magdalen flanked by eight small scenes from her life (Florence, Accademia). Sirén first attributed three pictures of the Virgin and Child (Berlin, Gemäldegal.; S Michele in Rovezzano, nr Florence; ex-S Fedele, Poppi, now Arezzo, Gal. & Mus. Med. & Mod.) to this Master and emphasized the apparent influence of Coppo di Marcovaldo. In 1926 he added another group of paintings to the Magdalen Masters oeuvre, including the altarpiece of the Virgin Enthroned between SS Andrew and James (Paris, Mus. A. Déc.). This, one of the painters most beautiful and important works, had already been linked by Toesca to the panel in the Accademia. Offner (1927) identified other early works, such as the dossal of the Virgin and Child Enthroned between SS Leonard and Peter (New Haven, CT, Yale U. A.G.) and the tabernacle showing the Virgin and Child Enthroned with SS Peter and Paul (New York, Met.).
Part of the Masters, anonymous, and monogrammists family
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