Follower of Filippino Lippi
VIRGIN AND CHILD
Tempera on panel
69,4 x 55 cm; 27 3/8 by 21 5/8 in.
Private collection
The Madonna and Child or The Virgin and
Child is often the name of a work
of art which shows the Virgin Mary and the Child Jesus. The word Madonna means
"My Lady" in Italian. Artworks of the Christ Child and his mother
Mary are part of the Roman Catholic tradition in many parts of the world
including Italy, Spain, Portugal, France, South America and the Philippines.
Paintings known as icons are also an important tradition of the Orthodox Church
and often show the Mary and the Christ Child. They are found particularly in
Eastern Europe, Russia, Egypt, the Middle East and India. More on The Madonna and Child
Filippino Lippi, (born c. 1457,
Prato, Republic of Florence—died April 18, 1504, Florence) early Renaissance painter of the Florentine school
whose works influenced the Tuscan Mannerists of the 16th century. After his
father’s death, Filippino entered the workshop of Botticelli. By 1473 he had
finished his apprenticeship. The style of Filippino’s earliest works stems from
that of Botticelli, but Filippino’s use of line is less sensitive and subtle
than Botticelli’s. In a group of paintings executed about 1480–85 he developed
a harder and more individual style. Among the most notable works of this period
is the Journey of Tobias (above). He was employed, along with Botticelli,
Perugino, and Domenico Ghirlandaio, on the frescoed decoration of Lorenzo de’
Medici’s villa at Spedaletto and at the end of 1482 was commissioned to
complete work left unfinished by Perugino in the Palazzo della Signoria in
Florence. No trace of either work survives. Soon after (probably 1483–84) he
was entrusted with the completion of the frescoes in the Brancacci Chapel in
the Carmine, which had been left unfinished on Masaccio’s death in 1428.
After his return from Rome, Filippino
executed a fresco of the Death of Laocoön for the villa of Lorenzo de’ Medici
at Poggio a Caiano, in which some of the decorative devices used in the Carafa
Chapel are again employed, and resumed work in the Strozzi Chapel (completed
1502), the frescoes of which anticipate Tuscan Mannerism of the 16th
century. More on Filippino Lippi,
Please visit my other blogs: Art Collector, Mythology, Marine Art, Portrait of a Lady, The Orientalist, Art of the Nude and The Canals of Venice, Middle East Artists, 365 Saints and 365 Days, also visit my Boards on Pinterest
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