The Coronation of the Virgin

Artist: Enguerrand Quarton | Medium: Oil on panel | Year: 1454 | Location: Villeneuve-les-Avignon, France
Enguerrand Quarton made this work in 1454, during the period of The Early Renaissance in the North. It is oil on panel, and it lives today in Villeneuve-les-Avignon, France. The period was one in which the flemish masters brought a different gift to the madonna: the ordinary world made holy, and this work belongs to that tradition.
The subject is the Coronation of the Virgin, Mary crowned Queen of Heaven by the Father and the Son. She is crowned not because she seized it but because she emptied herself, and Heaven exalts the humble.
The Father and the Son, shown identical, together crown Mary as the whole cosmos, Heaven, earth, and the dead, looks on. The lesson is the height of her exaltation, a creature lifted above all creation by the God she bore.
What makes this work endure is not only its craft but what it asks of the person who stands before it. The oil on panel is the vehicle; the lesson is the destination. Mary is shown here not as an abstraction but as a person, and the person she is points always past herself toward her Son. That is the consistent grammar of Marian art across eighteen centuries: she is never the end of the gaze. She is the direction of it.
Take a moment with this image. Let it do what it was made to do. It was not made to be admired from a distance. It was made to be prayed before.
Pause before this image. Let it do what it was made to do. It was not made to be admired from a distance. It was made to be prayed before.