| Support Type: | Wall / Plaster |
| Paint Type: | Fresco |
| Current Location: | Scrovegni Chapel, Padova/Italy |
We see a beautiful depiction of Joachim and Anne, the parents of the Virgin Mary, meeting at the Golden Gate. The architecture we see shows us how early Renaissance art began to break away from flat, symbolic Byzantine styles toward a more believable, lived-in reality. However, Giotto had not yet mastered the mathematical linear perspective of the 1400s; he used intuitive methods to create a sense of three-dimensional space. In earlier Medieval art, buildings often looked like tiny dollhouses that figures couldn't fit into. As we can see in this fresco Giotto scaled the architecture to the people, making them almost the same height as the gate. The elderly couple had long struggled with infertility, as Giotto di Bondone illustrates in other frescoes in the Scrovegni Chapel. Expelled from the temple, they prayed continuously for a child. The Meeting at the Golden Gate captures the moment when both Joachim and Anne have just received the angel’s message that, after years of infertility, they will conceive. This fresco is often considered one of the earliest depictions of a kiss in art history. Joachim and Anne are shown in an intimate setting, while figures in the background share in their joy. Their haloes overlap, almost foreshadowing the conception of Mary, the mother of Christ. In this way, the scene combines a personal moment of reunion with a deeper sense of divine purpose.
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