Art and culture being accessible to all is “fundamental”, the Ashmolean Museum director has said, after securing nearly £5 million in funding to save a rare Italian Renaissance painting in Oxford.
A temporary export bar was granted on the crucifixion painting by the Renaissance master Fra Angelico, to allow the Oxford University institute to raise the £4.48m needed to buy it in a private treaty sale.
Painted in the 1420s, The Crucifixion With the Virgin, Saint John The Evangelist And The Magdalen is the earliest surviving panel painting by the artist.
The Ashmolean director, Dr Xa Sturgis, said it was a “really exciting moment” for the museum to acquire such an “important work” after they secured the funds by the October 29 deadline.
“It’s a very beautiful painting, it’s a very moving painting. I think its quality, I would hope, speaks for itself, but it’s also a very important painting,” he said.
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“It’s certainly the earliest surviving crucifixion by Fra Angelico and Fra Angelico was one of the key artists of the Florentine Renaissance and it’s a subject that he painted again and again throughout his career.
“And with this picture, he sets the way in which he approaches the subject and so it’s an exciting picture because it’s a young artist at the beginning of his career.”
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The Ashmolean also has another Fra Angelico painting from the end of his career, which will allow visitors to see his development as an artist in a free public display.
He said: “I think access to great art and culture is fundamental and I do think that free entry to museums is something that this country should be really proud of.
“It does mean that, particularly a local audience, can gain a sense of these collections belonging to them, which they do, they are a collection that essentially belongs to the nation and to the public.”
The painting, which has been in a private British collection for more than 200 years and is valued at more than £5m for the open market, was sold to an overseas buyer and was at risk of leaving the country.
Because of the work’s value and importance, an export bar was granted in January to allow the museum nine months to raise the funds to keep the painting in the UK.
The piece will be used in the teaching of Oxford undergraduates in subjects including history, history of art and theology, and be included in the collection of artworks which they show to more than 40,000 school children each year.
Dr Sturgis said he feels arts and culture is key to a “full life” and called for museums to receive the support they need to play their role within civic life.
“They give a sense of identity to cities and communities, and they’re community hubs as well,” he added.
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