Sandro Botticelli
Sandro Botticelli Art
19th-Century

Alessandro di Mariano di Vanni Filipepi, known as Sandro Botticelli, Alessandro di Mariano di Vanni Filipepi, known as Sandro Botticelli, was an Italian painter of the Early Renaissance. Botticelli's posthumous reputation suffered until the late 19th century, when he was rediscovered by the Pre-Raphaelites who stimulated a reappraisal of his work. Since then, his paintings have been seen to represent the linear grace of Early Renaissance painting.

In addition to the mythological subjects for which he is best known today, Botticelli painted a wide range of religious subjects (including dozens of renditions of the Madonna and Child, many in the round tondo shape) and also some portraits. His best-known works are The Birth of Venus and Primavera, both in the Uffizi in Florence. Botticelli lived all his life in the same neighbourhood of Florence; his only significant times elsewhere were the months he spent painting in Pisa in 1474 and the Sistine Chapel in Rome in 1481–82.

Only one of Botticelli's paintings, the Mystic Nativity (London, National Gallery), is inscribed with a date (1501), but others can be dated with varying degrees of certainty on the basis of archival records, so the development of his style traced with some confidence. He was an independent master for all the 1470s, which saw his reputation soar. The 1480s were his most successful decade, the one in which his large mythological paintings were completed along with many of his most famous Madonnas. By the 1490s his style became more personal and to some extent mannered. His last works show him moving in a direction opposite to that of Leonardo da Vinci (seven years his junior) and the new generation of painters creating the High Renaissance style, and instead returning to a style that many have described as more Gothic or "archaic."

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Head of a Youth Wearing a Cap; a Right Forearm with the Hand Clutching a Stone; and a Left Hand Holding a Drapery (1480-1485)
Madonna and Child (c. 1470)
Madonna and Child with Angels (1465-1470)
Portrait of Simonetta Vespucci as Nymph (ca. 1480)
The Adoration Of The Magi
The Coronation Of The Virgin (ca 1492)
Virgin and Child (ca. 1485)
The Virgin Adoring the Child (1480-1490)
Pallas And The Centaur (1480-1485)
Fortitude (1470)
Birth Of Venus (1485)
Annunciation (1489-90)
The Descent Of The Holy Ghost (1495-1505)
Virgin and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist (c. 1490)
Virgin and Child With Saint John The Baptist (C. 1490)
Virgin and Child with an Angel (1475)
Spring (C. 1480)
Portrait of Smeralda Bandinelli (circa 1470 - 1475)
Madonna Adoring the Child with Five Angels (from 1485 until 1490)
The Virgin and Child (The Madonna of the Book) (1480)
The Lamentation over the Dead Christ (1495 - 1500)
The Adoration of the Christ Child (circa 1500)
Madonna and Child with both Saints John (1484-1485)
Judith with the Head of Holofernes (c. 1497 - c. 1500)
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