Virgin and Child with Two Angels

Art Institute of Chicago

Virgin and Child with Two Angels

Sandro Botticelli (Italian, 1444/45–1510)

Date
1485–95
Medium
Tempera on panel
Culture
Italy
Department
Painting and Sculpture of Europe
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

Sandro Botticelli’s works mark the culmination of a mystical religious tradition in the art of early Renaissance Florence, from the paintings of Lorenzo Monaco and Fra Angelico through those of Fra Filippo Lippi, Botticelli’s teacher. In this lyrical late work by Botticelli, two angels draw back curtains to reveal the Virgin and Child, who are framed by slender trees in a setting suggesting a throne. The intimate presentation of the holy figures and Christ’s gesture of blessing suggest that this small painting served a private devotional function. This supposition is supported by the choice of format, since a Florentine patron would have typically commissioned a circular painting, or tondo, for use in a bedchamber.

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Object type
AAT300033618

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