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1898

The Annunciation

Henry Ossawa Tanner

American (active France), 1859 - 1937

Tanner painted The Annunciation soon after returning to Paris from a trip to Egypt and Palestine in 1897. The son of a minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, Tanner specialized in religious subjects, and wanted to experience the people, culture, architecture, and light of the Holy Land. Influenced by what he saw, Tanner created an unconventional image of the moment when the angel Gabriel announces to Mary that she will bear the Son of God. Mary is shown as an adolescent dressed in rumpled Middle Eastern peasant clothing, without a halo or other holy attributes. Gabriel appears only as a shaft of light. Tanner entered this painting in the 1898 Paris Salon exhibition, after which it was bought for the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 1899, making it his first work to enter an American museum.

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Resources

Custom Prints for "The Annunciation" (104384)

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The Annunciation

Henry Ossawa Tanner made his painting so different from other artists’ paintings of the Biblical story of the Annunciation because he wanted the scene to be realistic.
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Mr. Prejudice

Horace Pippin used this painting to make a strong statement about his experiences as a soldier in a segregated troop during and after World War I in France, where he fought bravely for democracy.
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Henry Ossawa Tanner, The Annunciation, 1898 | Philadelphia Art Museum