The most famous work showing this subject is a fresco painting by the Italian Renaissance master
Piero della Francesca, finished around 1460. It is housed in the Museo della Madonna del Parto of
Monterchi,
Tuscany, Italy. Piero della Francesca finished it in seven days, using high quality colors, including a large quantity of
blu oltremare obtained using
lapis lazuli imported from
Afghanistan by the
Republic of Venice. The fresco was at one time located in Santa Maria di Momentana, (formerly
Santa Maria in Silvis), an old country church in the hill town of
Monterchi. That building was destroyed in 1785 by an earthquake and this work was detached from the walls and placed over the high altar of a new cemetery chapel; in 1992 it was moved to the Museo della Madonna del Parto in Monterchi. It was only in 1889 that the work was attributed to Piero della Francesca. Its dating has been the subject of debate, with estimates ranging from 1450 to 1475. The 16th century artist and writer
Giorgio Vasari wrote that it was completed in 1459, when Piero della Francesca was in
Sansepolcro because of his mother's death. The fresco also plays an important role in Richard Hayer's novel
Visus, in Andrei Tarkovsky's 1983 film
Nostalghia, and in the poem "San Sepolcro" by
Jorie Graham.
Gérard Grisey wrote a musical piece ''L'Icône paradoxale'' as a tribute to Piero della Francesca and this work, borrowing the title from an essay by
Yves Bonnefoy on the same subject. Piero della Francesca's Madonna has neither books nor royal attributes as in most previous versions of the image, nor does she wear the girdle. She is portrayed with a hand against her side to support her prominent belly. She is flanked by two angels, who are holding open the curtains of a pavilion decorated with
pomegranates, a symbol of Christ's Passion. The upper part of the painting has been lost. The two angels are specular, as they were executed by the artist using the same perforated cartoons to copy them. The theological symbolism behind the representation is complex. Maurizio Calvesi has suggested that the tent represents the
Ark of the Covenant. Mary would be thus the new Ark of Alliance in her role as Mother of Christ. For other scholars the tent is a symbol of the Catholic Church, and the Madonna would symbolize the tabernacle, as she is portrayed containing
Jesus' body. ==See also==