
Sandro Botticelli
1445–1510 · Republic of Florence · Early Renaissance
The story
For a few decades in the late 1400s, Florence was run in all but name by the Medici, a banking family who liked their power dressed in poetry and philosophy. Sandro Botticelli was their painter for it. He was born there around 1445, trained in the city's workshops, and by his forties he was turning out the images we still reach for when we picture the Renaissance at its most confident — Venus arriving on a shell, Spring walking through an orange grove, both painted for Medici cousins and hung in their villas.
Those pictures were unusual even then. Large mythological scenes of nearly-nude pagan gods, made for a private house rather than a church, they leaned on the Greek learning the Medici circle was busy reviving. The philosopher Marsilio Ficino, working under Medici patronage, argued that pagan beauty and Christian faith could be reconciled, and Botticelli's Venus is about as close as paint gets to that idea.
Then it fell apart. Lorenzo de' Medici died in 1492, the family was driven out two years later, and a Dominican friar named Savonarola took hold of the city with sermons about sin and the end of days. In 1497 his followers built the Bonfire of the Vanities in the main square and burned mirrors, fine clothes, books, and paintings judged immoral. Botticelli's mythologies survived, most likely because they sat safe in private Medici rooms. The painter himself seems to have been shaken by the preaching, and his later work turns religious and severe, the earlier lightness gone. He died in 1510, out of fashion, and stayed largely forgotten until the 19th century pulled the Venus back into view.
Works
104 works
The Birth of VenusSandro Botticelli, 1480
PrimaveraSandro Botticelli, 1480
Venus and MarsSandro Botticelli, 1485
Adoration of the MagiSandro Botticelli, 1475
Madonna of the MagnificatSandro Botticelli, 1481
Calumny of ApellesSandro Botticelli, 1497
Pallas and the CentaurSandro Botticelli, 1482
Idealized Portrait of a Lady (Portrait of Simonetta Vespucci as Nymph)Sandro Botticelli, 1480
The Mystical NativitySandro Botticelli, 1500
Cestello AnnunciationSandro Botticelli, 1489
Madonna and Child with an AngelSandro Botticelli, 1465
Madonna of the PomegranateSandro Botticelli, 1487
Portrait of a Man with a Medal of Cosimo the ElderSandro Botticelli, 1474
The Story of LucretiaSandro Botticelli, 1500
Madonna BardiSandro Botticelli, 1485
Young Man Holding a RoundelSandro Botticelli, 1480
Madonna and Child and Two AngelsSandro Botticelli, 1460
Madonna della LoggiaSandro Botticelli, 1467
Madonna of the BookSandro Botticelli, 1480
FortitudeSandro Botticelli, 1475
Lamentation over the Dead ChristSandro Botticelli, 1490
Madonna in Glory with SeraphimSandro Botticelli, 1469
Portrait of Giuliano de' MediciSandro Botticelli, 1478
Saint SebastianSandro Botticelli, 1474
The AnnunciationSandro Botticelli, 1490