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画作名称:
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Madonna and Child with Two Angels |
中文名称:
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圣母子与天使 |
画 家:
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弗拉·菲利普·利比(Fra Filippo Lippi) |
作品年份:
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1460 - 1465 年 |
原作材质:
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Tempera on wood |
画作尺寸:
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95 x 62 cm |
馆藏链接:
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乌菲齐美术馆(The Uffizi Gallery) |
备注信息:
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This is Filippo Lippi’s most famous piece and features an extraordinary spontaneity in its portrayal. The Virgin is seated on a throne, of which it is possible to glimpse only the soft, embroidered cushion and the carved
arm. She is intently gazing at her son, turning towards him with hands clasped in prayer. Her expression is gentle and indulgent, almost melancholy, as if she can foresee the painful destiny that awaits her son. The
young Jesus, covered only in swaddling, looks back at Mary, holding both arms out to her, supported by two angels. The angel in the foreground is smiling and looking outwards, as if to bring the onlooker into the scene.
The close-up style, with the group painted as little more than half figures, placed in a small space and bordered by a Serena stone frame, make this composition similar to numerous relief sculptures made by the Florentine
sculptors of the same period. The window opens out onto a vast, varied landscape, overlooking the sea, with rocks, vegetation, and buildings.
The holy image has been translated with a deep sense of humanity,
both through the expression of affections and in the choice of clothes and hairstyles, which have been inspired by the fashions of the same period. The Virgin is dressed most elegantly, with a crown of pearls and veils
woven into her hair, in the same way as Florentine noblewomen from the late 15th century. The halos are barely hinted at: fine crowns and rays of light that do not cover the landscape behind. As yet there is nothing
to confirm the idea that the Virgin’s face is none other than that of Lucrezia Buti, the young nun from Prato, who went on to become Lippi’s wife. The composition was a success from the start, and used as a model by
many artists, including the young Botticelli, a pupil of the artist. We do not know, however, the original destination of this holy image; the first information dates back to the late 18th century, when it was in the
Medici Villa of Poggio Imperiale in Florence.
A famous example of the artist's maturity, this painting was transferred to the Uffizi in 1796 from the Villa of Poggio Imperiale. Thanks to the spontaneity and naturalness of the composition, it reaped great interest as an iconographic model for numerous artists including the young Botticelli, apprenticed to the friar Lippi. On the back of the panel there is an autograph charcoal sketch of a female figure.