Nearly a hundred years had passed
by since Giotto lived and worked in Florence, and
in the same hilly country where he used to tend his
sheep another great painter was born.
Many other artists had come and gone,
and had added their golden links of beauty to the
chain of Art which bound these years together.
Some day you will learn to know all their names and
what they did. But now we will only single out,
here and there, a few of those names which are perhaps
greater than the rest. Just as on a clear night,
when we look up into the starlit sky, it would bewilder
us to try and remember all the stars, so we learn
first to know those that are most easily recognised the
Plough, or the Great Bear, as they shine with a clear
steady light against the background of a thousand lesser
stars.
The name by which this second great
painter is known is Fra Angelico, but that was only
the name he earned in later years. His baby name
was Guido, and his home was in a village close to
where Giotto was born.
He was not a poor boy, and did not
need to work in the fields or tend the sheep on the
hillside. Indeed, he might have soon become rich
and famous, for his wonderful talent for painting
would have quickly brought him honours and wealth
if he had gone out into the world. But instead
of this, when he was a young man of twenty he made
up his mind to enter the convent at Fiesole, and to
become a monk of the Order of Saint Dominic.
Every brother, or frate, as he
is called, who leaves the world and enters the life
of the convent is given a new name, and his old name
is never used again. So young Guido was called
Fra Giovanni, or Brother John. But it is not
by that name that he is known best, but that of Fra
Angelico, or the angelic brother a name
which was given him afterwards because of his pure
and beautiful life, and the heavenly pictures which
he painted.
With all his great gifts in his hands,
with all the years of youth and pleasure stretching
out green and fair before him, he said good-bye to
earthly joys, and chose rather to serve his Master
Christ in the way he thought was right.
The monks of St. Dominic were the
great preachers of those days men who tried
to make the world better by telling people what they
ought to do, and teaching them how to live honest
and good lives. But there are other ways of teaching
people besides preaching, and the young monk who spent
his time bending over the illuminated prayer-book,
seeing with his dreamy eyes visions of saints and
white-robed angels, was preparing to be a greater
teacher than them all. The words of the preacher
monks have passed away, and the world pays little
heed to them now, but the teaching of Fra Angelico,
the silent lessons of his wonderful pictures, are
as fresh and clear to-day as they were in those far-off
years.
Great trouble was in store for the
monks of the little convent at Fiesole, which Fra
Angelico and his brother Benedetto had entered.
Fierce struggles were going on in Italy between different
religious parties, and at one time the little band
of preaching monks were obliged to leave their peaceful
home at Fiesole to seek shelter in other towns.
But, as it turned out, this was good fortune for the
young painter-monk, for in those hill towns of Umbria
where the brothers sought refuge there were pictures
to be studied which delighted his eyes with their
beauty, and taught him many a lesson which he could
never have learned on the quiet slopes of Fiesole.
The hill towns of Italy are very much
the same to-day as they were in those days. Long
winding roads lead upwards from the plain below to
the city gates, and there on the summit of the hill
the little town is built. The tall white houses
cluster close together, and the overhanging eaves
seem almost to meet across the narrow paved streets,
and always there is the great square, with the church
the centre of all.
It would be almost a day’s journey
to follow the white road that leads down from Perugia
across the plain to the little hill town of Assisi,
and many a spring morning saw the painter-monk setting
out on the convent donkey before sunrise and returning
when the sun had set. He would thread his way
up between the olive-trees until he reached the city
gates, and pass into the little town without hindrance.
For the followers of St. Francis in their brown robes
would be glad to welcome a stranger monk, though his
black robe showed that he belonged to a different
order. Any one who came to see the glory of their
city, the church where their saint lay, which Giotto
had covered with his wonderful pictures, was never
refused admittance.
How often then must Fra Angelico have
knelt in the dim light of that lower church of Assisi,
learning his lesson on his knees, as was ever his
habit. Then home again he would wend his way,
his eyes filled with visions of those beautiful pictures,
and his hand longing for the pencil and brush, that
he might add new beauty to his own work from what
he had learned.
Several years passed by, and at last
the brothers were allowed to return to their convent
home of San Dominico at Fiesole, and there they lived
peaceably for a long time. We cannot tell exactly
what pictures our painter-monk painted during those
peaceful years, but we know he must have been looking
out with wise, seeing eyes, drinking in all the beauty
that was spread around him.
At his feet lay Florence, with its
towers and palaces, the Arno running through it like
a silver thread, and beyond, the purple of the Tuscan
hills. All around on the sheltered hillside were
green vines and fruit-trees, olives and cypresses,
fields flaming in spring with scarlet anémones
or golden with great yellow tulips, and hedges of
rose-bushes covered with clusters of pink blossoms.
No wonder, then, such beauty sunk into his heart,
and we see in his pictures the pure fresh colour of
the spring flowers, with no shadow of dark or evil
things.
Soon the fame of the painter began
to be whispered outside the convent walls, and reached
the ears of Cosimo da Medici, one of the
powerful rulers of Florence. He offered the monks
a new home, and, when they were settled in the convent
of San Marco in Florence, he invited Fra Angelico
to fresco the walls.
One by one the heavenly pictures were
painted upon the walls of the cells and cloister of
the new home. How the brothers must have crowded
round to see each new fresco as it was finished, and
how anxious they would be to see which picture was
to be near their own particular bed. In all the
frescoes, whether he painted the gentle Virgin bending
before the angel messenger, or tried to show the glory
of the ascended Lord, the artist-monk would always
introduce one or more of the convent’s special
saints, which made the brothers feel that the pictures
were their very own. Fra Angelico had a kind word
and smile for all the brothers. He was never
impatient, and no one ever saw him angry, for he was
as humble and gentle as the saints whose pictures he
loved to paint.
It is told of him, too, that he never
took a brush or pencil in his hand without a prayer
that his work might be to the glory of God. Often
when he painted the sufferings of our Lord, the tears
would be seen running down his cheeks and almost blinding
his eyes.
There is an old legend which tells
of a certain monk who, when he was busily illuminating
a page of his missal, was called away to do some service
for the poor. He went unwillingly, the legend
says, for he longed to put the last touches to the
holy picture he was painting; but when he returned,
lo! he found his work finished by angel hands.
Often when we look at some of Fra
Angelico’s pictures we are reminded of this
legend, and feel that he too might have been helped
by those same angel hands. Did they indeed touch
his eyes that he might catch glimpses of a Heaven
where saints were swinging their golden censers, and
white-robed angels danced in the flowery meadows of
Paradise? We cannot tell; but this we know, that
no other painter has ever shown us such a glory of
heavenly things.
Best of all, the angel-painter loved
to paint pictures of the life of our Lord; and in
the picture I have shown you, you will see the tender
care with which he has drawn the head of the Infant
Jesus with His little golden halo, the Madonna in
her robe of purest blue, holding the Baby close in
her arms, St. Joseph the guardian walking at the side,
and all around the flowers and trees which he loved
so well in the quiet home of Fiesole.
He did not care for fame or power,
this dreamy painter of angels, and when the Pope invited
him to Rome to paint the walls of a chapel there,
he thought no more of the glory and honour than if
he was but called upon to paint another cell at San
Marco.
But when the Pope had seen what this
quiet monk could do, he called the artist to him.
‘A man who can paint such pictures,’
he said, ’must be a good man, and one who will
do well whatever he undertakes. Will you, then,
do other work for me, and become my Archbishop at
Florence?’ But the painter was startled and
dismayed.
‘I cannot teach or preach or
govern men,’ he said, ’I can but use my
gift of painting for the glory of God. Let me
rather be as I am, for it is safer to obey than to
rule.’
But though he would not take this
honour himself, he told the Pope of a friend of his,
a humble brother, Fra Antonino, at the convent of San
Marco, who was well fitted to do the work. So
the Pope took the painter’s advice, and the
choice was so wise and good, that to this day the
Florentine people talk lovingly of their good bishop
Antonino.
It was while he was at work in Rome
that Fra Angelico died, so his body does not rest
in his own beloved Florence. But if his body lies
in Rome, his gentle spirit still seems to hover around
the old convent of San Marco, and there we learn to
know and love him best. Little wonder that in
after ages they looked upon him almost as a saint,
and gave him the title of ‘Beato,’ or
the blessed angel-painter.