Documentation about the work is scarce. The earliest mentioning of the
Penitent Magdalene dates from 1500 and mentions that the statue is being placed back in the
Baptistery in Florence against the southwest wall. Since then, the statue has been moved a few times: in 1688 it was replaced by the baptismal font and put in storage, in 1735 it was moved back to the Baptistery against the southeast wall and in 1912 it was put back against the southwest wall. Today, being moved after restoration, it can be seen in the
Sala della Maddalena in the
Museo dell'Opera del Duomo in Florence. The Renaissance art historian
Giorgio Vasari mentions the work in his
Vite: "In the same baptistery, opposite this tomb, a statue from Donatello's own hand can be seen, a wooden Saint Mary Magdalene in Penitence which is very beautiful and well executed, for she has wasted away by fasting and abstinence to such an extent that every part of her body reflects a perfect and complete understanding of human anatomy." Donatello was thought to have executed the work when he was more than sixty years old, after he had spent a decade in
Padua. The dating was supported by a 1455 copy from
Neri di Bicci's workshop, now in the Museum of the Collegiate of
Empoli. In 1500 the work was in the city's baptistery. According to an Italian historian, it was seen by
Charles VIII of France in the 1480s, when he was camped with his army near Florence. The work was damaged by the
1966 flood of the Arno, and the restoration process revealed some of the statue's original polychrome paint and
gilding. ==Notes==