Masaccio, Expulsion of Adam and Eve from Eden in the Brancacci Chapel

Masaccio, Expulsion of Adam and Eve from Eden, Brancacci Chapel, Santa Maria del Carmine, Florence, Italy, c. 1424-27, fresco, 7 feet x 2 feet 11 inches

[0:00] [music]

Dr. Steven Zucker: [0:04] In the Brancacci Chapel in Santa Maria del Carmine, just to the left of Masaccio’s great painting “The Tribute Money,” is another painting by Masaccio, “The Expulsion From Eden.”

Dr. Beth Harris: [0:15] The frescoes in this chapel all tell the story of the life of Saint Peter, except for the Expulsion. We could ask, “What is the Expulsion doing here?” This is the story of Adam and Eve being expelled from the Garden of Eden.

[0:28] They’ve eaten the forbidden fruit from the Tree of Knowledge, and God has discovered that transgression and has banished them from Eden, and we see a foreshortened angel.

Dr. Zucker: [0:40] That’s an armed angel. It looks like the marshal to me.

Dr. Harris: [0:42] Chasing them out of the Garden of Eden.

Dr. Zucker: [0:44] They’re being evicted.

Dr. Harris: [0:46] What follows from this is that mankind knows sin and…

Dr. Zucker: [0:50] And death.

Dr. Harris: [0:52] Exactly. This is the moment from which everything else comes, in terms of Catholic understanding of man’s destiny.

Dr. Zucker: [0:58] That’s right. Because it is from this fall from grace that Christ is required.

Dr. Harris: [1:03] It makes Christ’s coming necessary to redeem us, but it also makes necessary the Church, that Saint Peter founds. Sometimes, Mary and Christ are seen as the second Adam and Eve. Adam and Eve, who caused the fall into sin, and Mary and Christ who make possible salvation.

Dr. Zucker: [1:22] That idea is something that everybody in this Church would be familiar with. I love the architecture on the extreme left, the gate of Heaven itself, that they’ve just left. It reminds me of the indebtedness that Masaccio has to people like Giotto in the previous century, where architecture is sometimes used simply as a foil, as a kind of stage set.

Dr. Harris: [1:42] There’s so much emotion.

Dr. Zucker: [1:44] I’m especially interested in the contrast of emotions. Adam is covering his face. There is a kind of shame, like real awareness of his sin. His body is exposed to us, and actually that’s interesting. This whole chapel was very recently cleaned, and for a very long time, there was a vine that covered up his genitals.

Dr. Harris: [2:03] That someone had painted over.

Dr. Zucker: [2:05] That’s right, long after. We’ve been restored to the original nudity that Masaccio gave us, which is absolutely era-appropriate. But he’s not covering his body, he’s covering his face. It’s a kind of internal sense of guilt.

[2:16] Whereas Eve seems to have been taken directly from the ancient classical prototype of the modest Venus. She’s shown in a beautiful contrapposto, covering herself, but it’s her shame which seems more physical. But because her face is exposed, we can see the real pain that she expresses through it.

Dr. Harris: [2:35] You said “beautiful contrapposto,” but I think about contrapposto as a standing, relaxed pose, and these figures are in motion.

Dr. Zucker: [2:44] They are, they’re moving forward.

Dr. Harris: [2:45] Masaccio was the first artist in a very long time to attempt to paint the human body naturalistically.

Dr. Zucker: [2:52] Yeah.

Dr. Harris: [2:53] And as a result, he hasn’t quite gotten all of it perfectly.

Dr. Zucker: [2:56] No, there’s some awkward passages there.

Dr. Harris: [2:57] Yeah, Adam’s arms are a little bit too short, Eve’s left arm is a little bit too long. Given that Masaccio’s the first artist to really attempt this naturalism in a thousand years, some of that is to be forgiven.

Dr. Zucker: [3:10] I have to say that I think he’s done an extraordinary job. If you look at Adam’s abdomen, for example, it is really beautifully rendered. There is a physicality here, there’s a sense of weight and there’s a sense of musculature that I can’t remember seeing in earlier painting.

Dr. Harris: [3:24] Masaccio’s employing modeling very clearly from light to dark. He’s so interested in modeling because that’s what makes the forms appear three-dimensional. Also, that foreshortened angel is helping to create a sense of space for the figures to exist in, even though, as you pointed out, that architecture is more symbolic than real.

Dr. Zucker: [3:42] Yeah, it’s just totally schematic, isn’t it?

Dr. Harris: [3:44] Yeah.

Dr. Zucker: [3:44] There are a couple of changes that are probably worth noting. One is that you can really see the giornata. You can see that Adam was painted separately from Eve and you can see the darker blue in back of Adam that really highlight those different patches of plaster.

Dr. Harris: [3:56] Those were not differentiable in the 15th century.

Dr. Zucker: [4:00] Right. No, that’s changed over time.

Dr. Harris: [4:01] By “giornata,” you mean the different days the different parts of the fresco were painted in?

Dr. Zucker: [4:06] Right. “Giornata” means “a day’s work.”

Dr. Harris: [4:08] This is true fresco, which means that it was painted onto wet plaster, so an artist could only do a small section at a time because the plaster would otherwise dry.

Dr. Zucker: [4:19] Other changes that have taken place in the painting that I think are worth noting are that the sword and the rays of light that are emanating from Eden are now black, but that’s oxidized silver and it would have been very shiny initially.

[4:32] I think it’s important also to note that “The Expulsion” is the first scene that we look at as we enter into this chapel. They literally walk into the story. Almost like a panel in a cartoon, it is leading our eye from left to right so that we can read through the story of St. Peter.

[4:48] [music]

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Cite this page as: Dr. Steven Zucker and Dr. Beth Harris, "Masaccio, Expulsion of Adam and Eve from Eden in the Brancacci Chapel," in Smarthistory, December 6, 2015, accessed November 4, 2024, https://smarthistory.org/masaccio-expulsion-of-adam-and-eve-from-eden/.