| Support Type: | Wall / Plaster |
| Paint Type: | Fresco |
| Current Location: | Bardi di Mangona Chapel (historically known as the Bardi di Vernio Chapel) within the Basilica of Santa Croce in Florence, Italy |
Painted for the wealthy Bardi family chapel inside Florence’s Basilica of Santa Croce, Maso di Banco’s fresco, "St. Sylvester Resurrecting the Two Magi Killed by a Dragon" (also referred to as "St. Sylvester and the Dragon" or "The Miracle of the Dragon") acts as high-stakes political theatre masked as a spiritual miracle. The visual commentary of the fresco unfolds within a strikingly modern, crumbling architectural landscape where Maso cleverly splits the timeline into a single, cohesive narrative. On the left, a serene Pope Sylvester I binds a subterranean dragon's jaws while nearby monks hilariously plug their noses against the beast's toxic stench. Move to the center, and the very same Pope shifts into action, raising his hand to resurrect two pagan magicians lying lifelessly on the stone floor. As Giotto's most brilliant pupil, Maso pushed his mentor's emotional naturalism into structured, three-dimensional spaces. The stark geometric walls and ruined arches frame the human drama with a radical sense of depth. This bold approach directly paved the structural pathway for Early Renaissance pioneers like Masaccio nearly a century later, proving that ancient stone structures could breathe life into sacred art.
Sources:
Loading Interpretations....