
Filippo Lippi
1406–1469 · Republic of Florence · Renaissance
The story
Filippo Lippi was a friar who kept forgetting he was a friar. Orphaned young in Florence, he was placed in the Carmelite monastery by the Carmine, where as a boy he could watch Masaccio painting the frescoes that were reinventing Florentine art, solid figures with real weight in real space. Lippi took vows, but he was a painter first, and eventually the Medici, Florence's ruling banking family, kept him working almost as a private artist.
Around 1456, while serving as chaplain to a convent in Prato, he met a young novice named Lucrezia Buti and took her away from the nuns during a religious procession. The scandal was enormous. The couple had a son, Filippino, who became a fine painter in his own right, and according to the biographer Vasari it was Cosimo de' Medici himself who eventually smoothed things over and got the pair released from their vows.
Through all of it Lippi painted some of the tenderest Madonnas of the century, human-faced young women set in front of real landscapes. His most important pupil absorbed exactly that sweetness of line: Sandro Botticelli, who carried it into the next generation. Lippi died in 1469 in Spoleto, where he was at work on frescoes in the cathedral.
Works
16 works
Madonna and ChildFilippo Lippi, 1460
Adoration in the ForestFilippo Lippi, 1459
Annunciation with Two Kneeling DonorsFilippo Lippi, 1445
Barbadori Altarpiece and PredellaFilippo Lippi, 1437
Coronation of the VirginFilippo Lippi, 1441
Madonna and Child EnthronedFilippo Lippi, 1437
Madonna and Child with Saints Francis, Damian, Cosmas and Anthony of PaduaFilippo Lippi, 1440
Saint Lawrence Enthroned with Saints and DonorsFilippo Lippi, 1453
AnnunciationFilippo Lippi, 1447
Madonna of Palazzo Medici-RiccardiFilippo Lippi, 1466
Martelli AnnunciationFilippo Lippi, 1445
PietàFilippo Lippi, 1437
Virgin with the Child and Scenes from the Life of St AnneFilippo Lippi, 1452
Adoration of CamaldoliFilippo Lippi, 1463
Funeral of St. JeromeFilippo Lippi, 1452
Marsuppini CoronationFilippo Lippi, 1444