the cry issuing from Eve’s mouth voices her anguish. The angel does
not force them physically from Eden. Rather, they stumble on blindly,
the angel’s will and their own despair driving them. The composition
is starkly simple, its message incomparably eloquent.
HOLY TRINITYMasaccio’s Holy Trinity fresco (FIG. 21-20) in
Santa Maria Novella is another of the young artist’s masterworks
and the premier early-15th-century example of the application
of mathematics to the depiction of space. Masaccio painted the
composition on two levels of unequal height. Above, in a coffered
barrel-vaulted chapel reminiscent of a Roman triumphal arch
Florence 555
21-19Masaccio,Expulsion of Adam and Eve from Eden,Brancacci
Chapel, Santa Maria del Carmine, Florence, Italy, ca. 1424–1427. Fresco,
7 2 11 .
Adam and Eve, expelled from Eden, stumble on blindly, driven by the
angel’s will and their own despair. The hazy background specifies no
locale but suggests a space around and beyond the figures.
21-20Masaccio,Holy Trinity,Santa Maria Novella, Florence, Italy,
ca. 1424–1427. Fresco, 21 105 – 8 10 43 – 4 .
Masaccio’s Holy Trinity is the premier early-15th-century example of the
application of mathematics to pictorial organization in Brunelleschi’s
new science of perspective. The illusionism is breathtaking.
1 ft.
1 ft.
with convincing structural accuracy, thereby suggesting substantial
body weight. Further, the hazy background specifies no locale but
suggests a space around and beyond the figures. Adam’s feet, clearly
in contact with the ground, mark the human presence on earth, and