In September of 2024, graduate student Michaela Piene of the Art History and Museum studies program at the University of St. Thomas received a departmental travel grant to complete her research in Italy in support of her qualifying paper. Michaela’s research focuses on quattrocento devotional art, specifically the usage of visual languages and sensory qualities within the work of Fra Angelico.

Michaela Peine in Cloister of Santa Maria Novella, Florence
The in-person experience of Renaissance art was key to her research, allowing her to study the material and formal qualities that activate these works of art up close and in a more personal way. She divided her time primarily between Florence and Rome, researching Fra Angelico’s work and hunting for contemporary examples of similar activation in art. A key element of her trip was a visit to the Niccoline Chapel, located within the Vatican Palace. The chapel, entirely frescoed by Fra Angelico, is typically closed to guests, however, Michaela was able to connect with Dr. Fabrizio Biferali, the curator of Renaissance art in the Vatican Museum. Dr. Biferali brought Michaela on a tour of the Niccoline Chapel and provided her with conservation reports, allowing her to study in-depth the architectural and material context of Fra Angelico’s work. The work Michaela did in Italy is key to the research for her qualifying paper, which is advised by Dr. Lois Eliason, and will be presented in December of 2024.

Michaela in Chapel of the Magi, Palazzo Medici Riccardi, Florence.

Fra Angelico painting in cloister of San Marco, Florence.



