The
Coronation of the Virgin is a common subject in art but the contract for this work specifies the unusual representation of the
Father and
Son of the
Holy Trinity as identical figures (very rare in the 15th century, though there are
other examples), but allows Quarton to represent the Virgin as he chooses. Around the Trinity, blue and red
angels are deployed similar to those in Fouquet's
Melun diptych (now Antwerp). The depiction of Rome (left) and
Jerusalem (right) in the panoramic landscape below is also specified in the contract; the donor had been on a
pilgrimage that included both cities. Beneath this
Purgatory (left) and
Hell (right) open up, and in the centre the donor kneels before a
Crucifixion. On the extreme left a church is shown in "cut-away" style, containing a
Mass of Saint Gregory. Quarton was given seventeen months from the contract date to deliver the painting by September 29, 1454. As is usual, materials were carefully specified; elements of the language used appear to come from the dialect of Quarton's native
Picardy, suggesting much of the final draft was by him. The contract has been described as "the most detailed to survive for medieval European painting". Like many of Quarton's landscape backgrounds, this depicts the Provençal landscape in a style derived from Italian painting, whilst his figures are more influenced by Netherlandish artists like
Robert Campin and
Jan van Eyck, but with a severity and elegance that is French alone, as is the geometrical boldness of his composition. His very strong colours have little shading, and his lighting is "harsh, even merciless". The landscape includes perhaps the first appearance in art of
Mont Sainte-Victoire, later to be painted so often by
Cézanne and others (some sources also mention
Mont Ventoux). The painting remained for more than three centuries in the
monastery Chartreuse du Val de Bénédiction,
Villeneuve-lès-Avignon, for which it was commissioned by a local clergyman, Jean de Montagny. Since 1986 it is part of the collection of the in the same town. ==The
Pietà of Villeneuve-lès-Avignon==