Sandro Botticelli Painting Reproductions 5 of 5
1445-1510
Italian Quattrocento Painter
Sandro Botticelli, born Alessandro di Mariano di Vanni Filipepi in 1445, was one of the most enigmatic and influential painters of the Florentine Renaissance. His name resonates with two iconic paintings: "The Birth of Venus" and "La Primavera," works that have come to symbolize the Renaissance for modern audiences. Botticelli’s art, filled with grace, mythological beauty, and a deep reverence for religious themes, remains a testament to a time when Florence was the cradle of artistic innovation.
Botticelli’s nickname is a curious one, derived from his older brother Giovanni, a pawnbroker who was called Botticello, or “Little Barrel.” This familial quirk stuck with Alessandro throughout his life, though it belies the lyrical and delicate nature of his work. Like many artists of his time, Botticelli’s early life is somewhat shadowed in mystery, though much of what we know today is thanks to Giorgio Vasari’s "Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Sculptors, & Architects." Vasari, always a colorful narrator, provides a blend of fact and legend that has shaped the artist’s posthumous reputation.
Born in Florence, Botticelli’s father was a tanner, and like many Florentine families, his early career path was determined by practical considerations. He was first apprenticed to a goldsmith, but it became clear that his heart lay elsewhere. His father wisely redirected him toward painting, placing him under the tutelage of Filippo Lippi, one of the most admired masters of the time. Lippi’s influence on Botticelli was profound. The older painter instilled in his pupil the techniques of panel painting and fresco, alongside a sensitivity to linear perspective, which would become central to Botticelli’s compositions.
Under Lippi’s guidance, Botticelli learned the fundamentals of figure drawing, costume design, and the soft, flowing lines that would later define his mature style. Even in Botticelli’s later works, echoes of Lippi’s elegant figures and pale, ethereal color palette remain, though Botticelli would eventually forge his own path with a much bolder use of color and line.
By 1470, Botticelli was established as an independent master with his own workshop in Florence. His early work, such as "Fortitude" (1470), already demonstrates a striking command of composition and character. These early paintings, like the paired panels "Judith and Holofernes", exhibit Botticelli’s growing mastery of the human form and his ability to convey psychological depth through gesture and expression.
Botticelli’s artistic maturity came around 1478-1481, when he began to abandon any tentativeness in his compositions. His figures took on a fluidity and vitality that gave them a presence unlike anything seen before. His work now fully integrated figures into their settings with harmonious balance. During this time, he would also become one of the few painters able to translate narrative texts - whether the biographies of saints or the complex poetry of Dante’s "Divine Comedy" - into pictorial form with an economy and elegance that made his compositions both dynamic and timeless.
Religious subjects played a crucial role in Botticelli’s oeuvre. His "Madonna and Child" paintings, such as those in the National Gallery of Art and the Musée du Petit Palais, reveal his ability to render deeply spiritual scenes while maintaining a sensitivity to the human experience. The Virgin Mary in Botticelli’s works is always a regal, almost otherworldly figure, yet she is imbued with an inner pensiveness, an emotional weight that speaks to Botticelli’s ability to infuse his figures with both grace and introspection.
Botticelli’s artistic range extended beyond devotional works. His secular commissions, particularly his portraits and mythological paintings, were equally celebrated. His portrait of "Giuliano de’ Medici", painted after the nobleman’s tragic assassination in the Pazzi conspiracy of 1478, captures both the dignity and loss felt in Florence after his death. But it was Botticelli’s ability to transform the ancient myths into allegories for love, beauty, and virtue that solidified his place as one of the most innovative painters of the Renaissance.
In the mid-1470s, Botticelli created "La Primavera" and "The Birth of Venus", two of his most iconic works. These mythological scenes, painted for the Medici family, particularly for Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de’ Medici, are rich with allegory and symbolism. "La Primavera" presents an allegory of love’s renewal and marriage’s fruition, while "The Birth of Venus" celebrates the divine origin of beauty itself. The figures in these paintings, whether Venus, the Three Graces, or Mars, are rendered with an otherworldly beauty, their forms idealized yet anchored in a delicate humanity. These works are imbued with the intellectual spirit of the Florentine Renaissance, where Classical mythology, humanism, and courtly love intersect.
Botticelli’s mythological paintings do not simply illustrate familiar stories. Instead, they reimagine the ancient world through the lens of Florentine humanism. His Venus is not just the goddess of love; she represents an ideal of divine beauty, her arrival a metaphor for the transformative power of art and love. The intricacy of these compositions, where every gesture and figure carries symbolic weight, showcases Botticelli’s brilliance in weaving together the intellectual and the aesthetic.
Despite his success, Botticelli’s later years were marked by a dramatic shift in style and subject matter. Influenced by the religious fervor of Girolamo Savonarola, the firebrand Dominican friar who temporarily seized control of Florence, Botticelli’s work became more introspective, even apocalyptic. His "Mystic Nativity" (1500) reflects this turn toward religious intensity. Gone are the ethereal nymphs and Classical deities of his earlier works; instead, Botticelli presents a vision of spiritual redemption and divine wrath. The figures in his later paintings become elongated, almost mannerist, their gestures more exaggerated as if to convey the urgency of their religious message.
Savonarola’s rise and the subsequent fall of the Medici significantly impacted Botticelli’s later career. Vasari suggests that Botticelli may have even burned some of his secular works in the infamous "Bonfire of the Vanities" in 1497, though this claim remains speculative. What is clear is that the political and religious upheavals of Florence deeply affected Botticelli’s art and life.
In his final years, Botticelli worked on a series of illustrations for Dante’s "Divine Comedy", a project that would remain unfinished at the time of his death in 1510. These drawings, like many of his later works, reveal a more somber, introspective artist, one still grappling with the balance between the earthly and the divine. Though Vasari paints a picture of Botticelli’s later years as financially difficult, evidence suggests that he remained relatively comfortable, receiving commissions until the end of his life.
Sandro Botticelli’s legacy is vast. His paintings embody the intellectual and artistic ideals of Renaissance Florence, where beauty, philosophy, and spirituality were intertwined. Botticelli’s art transcends time, his graceful lines and ethereal compositions continuing to inspire and captivate, reminding us that beauty, in all its forms, remains one of humanity’s greatest pursuits.
Botticelli’s nickname is a curious one, derived from his older brother Giovanni, a pawnbroker who was called Botticello, or “Little Barrel.” This familial quirk stuck with Alessandro throughout his life, though it belies the lyrical and delicate nature of his work. Like many artists of his time, Botticelli’s early life is somewhat shadowed in mystery, though much of what we know today is thanks to Giorgio Vasari’s "Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Sculptors, & Architects." Vasari, always a colorful narrator, provides a blend of fact and legend that has shaped the artist’s posthumous reputation.
Born in Florence, Botticelli’s father was a tanner, and like many Florentine families, his early career path was determined by practical considerations. He was first apprenticed to a goldsmith, but it became clear that his heart lay elsewhere. His father wisely redirected him toward painting, placing him under the tutelage of Filippo Lippi, one of the most admired masters of the time. Lippi’s influence on Botticelli was profound. The older painter instilled in his pupil the techniques of panel painting and fresco, alongside a sensitivity to linear perspective, which would become central to Botticelli’s compositions.
Under Lippi’s guidance, Botticelli learned the fundamentals of figure drawing, costume design, and the soft, flowing lines that would later define his mature style. Even in Botticelli’s later works, echoes of Lippi’s elegant figures and pale, ethereal color palette remain, though Botticelli would eventually forge his own path with a much bolder use of color and line.
By 1470, Botticelli was established as an independent master with his own workshop in Florence. His early work, such as "Fortitude" (1470), already demonstrates a striking command of composition and character. These early paintings, like the paired panels "Judith and Holofernes", exhibit Botticelli’s growing mastery of the human form and his ability to convey psychological depth through gesture and expression.
Botticelli’s artistic maturity came around 1478-1481, when he began to abandon any tentativeness in his compositions. His figures took on a fluidity and vitality that gave them a presence unlike anything seen before. His work now fully integrated figures into their settings with harmonious balance. During this time, he would also become one of the few painters able to translate narrative texts - whether the biographies of saints or the complex poetry of Dante’s "Divine Comedy" - into pictorial form with an economy and elegance that made his compositions both dynamic and timeless.
Religious subjects played a crucial role in Botticelli’s oeuvre. His "Madonna and Child" paintings, such as those in the National Gallery of Art and the Musée du Petit Palais, reveal his ability to render deeply spiritual scenes while maintaining a sensitivity to the human experience. The Virgin Mary in Botticelli’s works is always a regal, almost otherworldly figure, yet she is imbued with an inner pensiveness, an emotional weight that speaks to Botticelli’s ability to infuse his figures with both grace and introspection.
Botticelli’s artistic range extended beyond devotional works. His secular commissions, particularly his portraits and mythological paintings, were equally celebrated. His portrait of "Giuliano de’ Medici", painted after the nobleman’s tragic assassination in the Pazzi conspiracy of 1478, captures both the dignity and loss felt in Florence after his death. But it was Botticelli’s ability to transform the ancient myths into allegories for love, beauty, and virtue that solidified his place as one of the most innovative painters of the Renaissance.
In the mid-1470s, Botticelli created "La Primavera" and "The Birth of Venus", two of his most iconic works. These mythological scenes, painted for the Medici family, particularly for Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de’ Medici, are rich with allegory and symbolism. "La Primavera" presents an allegory of love’s renewal and marriage’s fruition, while "The Birth of Venus" celebrates the divine origin of beauty itself. The figures in these paintings, whether Venus, the Three Graces, or Mars, are rendered with an otherworldly beauty, their forms idealized yet anchored in a delicate humanity. These works are imbued with the intellectual spirit of the Florentine Renaissance, where Classical mythology, humanism, and courtly love intersect.
Botticelli’s mythological paintings do not simply illustrate familiar stories. Instead, they reimagine the ancient world through the lens of Florentine humanism. His Venus is not just the goddess of love; she represents an ideal of divine beauty, her arrival a metaphor for the transformative power of art and love. The intricacy of these compositions, where every gesture and figure carries symbolic weight, showcases Botticelli’s brilliance in weaving together the intellectual and the aesthetic.
Despite his success, Botticelli’s later years were marked by a dramatic shift in style and subject matter. Influenced by the religious fervor of Girolamo Savonarola, the firebrand Dominican friar who temporarily seized control of Florence, Botticelli’s work became more introspective, even apocalyptic. His "Mystic Nativity" (1500) reflects this turn toward religious intensity. Gone are the ethereal nymphs and Classical deities of his earlier works; instead, Botticelli presents a vision of spiritual redemption and divine wrath. The figures in his later paintings become elongated, almost mannerist, their gestures more exaggerated as if to convey the urgency of their religious message.
Savonarola’s rise and the subsequent fall of the Medici significantly impacted Botticelli’s later career. Vasari suggests that Botticelli may have even burned some of his secular works in the infamous "Bonfire of the Vanities" in 1497, though this claim remains speculative. What is clear is that the political and religious upheavals of Florence deeply affected Botticelli’s art and life.
In his final years, Botticelli worked on a series of illustrations for Dante’s "Divine Comedy", a project that would remain unfinished at the time of his death in 1510. These drawings, like many of his later works, reveal a more somber, introspective artist, one still grappling with the balance between the earthly and the divine. Though Vasari paints a picture of Botticelli’s later years as financially difficult, evidence suggests that he remained relatively comfortable, receiving commissions until the end of his life.
Sandro Botticelli’s legacy is vast. His paintings embody the intellectual and artistic ideals of Renaissance Florence, where beauty, philosophy, and spirituality were intertwined. Botticelli’s art transcends time, his graceful lines and ethereal compositions continuing to inspire and captivate, reminding us that beauty, in all its forms, remains one of humanity’s greatest pursuits.
111 Botticelli Paintings
The Virgin and Child with a Pomegranate c.1480/00
Oil Painting
$2337
$2337
Canvas Print
$56.22
$56.22
SKU: BSF-10264
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 67.9 x 52.7 cm
National Gallery, London, United Kingdom
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 67.9 x 52.7 cm
National Gallery, London, United Kingdom
The Virgin and Child c.1475/00
Oil Painting
$2628
$2628
Canvas Print
$95.28
$95.28
SKU: BSF-10265
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 83.2 x 64.8 cm
National Gallery, London, United Kingdom
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 83.2 x 64.8 cm
National Gallery, London, United Kingdom
A Lady in Profile c.1490
Oil Painting
$1708
$1708
Canvas Print
$57.68
$57.68
SKU: BSF-10266
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 59.1 x 40 cm
National Gallery, London, United Kingdom
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 59.1 x 40 cm
National Gallery, London, United Kingdom
Adoration of the Kings c.1470
Canvas Print
$48.70
$48.70
SKU: BSF-10267
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 50.2 x 135.9 cm
National Gallery, London, United Kingdom
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 50.2 x 135.9 cm
National Gallery, London, United Kingdom
Three Miracles of Saint Zenobius from Two ... c.1500
Canvas Print
$56.48
$56.48
SKU: BSF-10269
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 64.8 x 139.7 cm
National Gallery, London, United Kingdom
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 64.8 x 139.7 cm
National Gallery, London, United Kingdom
The Story of Nastagio degli Onesti c.1483
Oil Painting
$8982
$8982
Canvas Print
$71.20
$71.20
SKU: BSF-10270
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 84 x 142 cm
Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 84 x 142 cm
Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain
The Story of Nastagio degli Onesti II c.1483
Oil Painting
$3646
$3646
Canvas Print
$71.88
$71.88
SKU: BSF-10271
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 82 x 138 cm
Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 82 x 138 cm
Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain
The Story of Nastagio degli Onesti I c.1483
Oil Painting
$4151
$4151
Canvas Print
$71.55
$71.55
SKU: BSF-10272
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 83 x 138 cm
Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 83 x 138 cm
Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain
Venus Head - Detail from The Birth of Venus c.1485
Oil Painting
$1336
$1336
SKU: BSF-16788
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: unknown
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence, Italy
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: unknown
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence, Italy
St. Thomas Aquinas c.1480/85
Oil Painting
$1781
$1781
SKU: BSF-17075
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 51 x 38 cm
Public Collection
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 51 x 38 cm
Public Collection
Athene - Detail from Athene and the Centaur c.1480
Oil Painting
$1779
$1779
Canvas Print
$48.70
$48.70
SKU: BSF-17291
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: unknown
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence, Italy
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: unknown
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence, Italy
Madonna and Child with the Young St. John the Baptist c.1468
Oil Painting
$3233
$3233
Canvas Print
$53.68
$53.68
SKU: BSF-17366
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 90.7 x 67 cm
Louvre Museum, Paris, France
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 90.7 x 67 cm
Louvre Museum, Paris, France
Madonna and Child c.1470
Oil Painting
$2128
$2128
Canvas Print
$53.68
$53.68
SKU: BSF-17727
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 74.5 x 54.5 cm
National Gallery of Art, Washington, USA
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 74.5 x 54.5 cm
National Gallery of Art, Washington, USA
The Virgin Adoring the Child c.1480/90
Oil Painting
$2637
$2637
Canvas Print
$73.81
$73.81
SKU: BSF-17728
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 59 x 59 cm
National Gallery of Art, Washington, USA
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 59 x 59 cm
National Gallery of Art, Washington, USA
Mary with the Child and Singing Angels c.1480
Oil Painting
$6258
$6258
Canvas Print
$73.81
$73.81
SKU: BSF-18797
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 136.5 x 136.5 cm
Gemaldegalerie, Berlin, Germany
Sandro Botticelli
Original Size: 136.5 x 136.5 cm
Gemaldegalerie, Berlin, Germany