Enthroned Madonna and Child (Filippo Lippi)
Enthroned Madonna and Child or Madonna of Tarquinia | |
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Artist | Filippo Lippi |
Year | 1437 |
Medium | Tempera on panel |
Dimensions | 114 cm × 65 cm (45 in × 26 in) |
Location | Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica, Rome |
The Enthroned Madonna and Child (also known as Madonna of Tarquinia) is a painting by the Italian Renaissance painter Filippo Lippi.[1] It is housed in the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica of Palazzo Barberini, Rome.
The work, dated "A.D. M. MCCCCXXXVII" (1437) on the cartouche, was commissioned by Giovanni Vitelleschi, Papal military commander and archbishop of Florence. The painting was probably destined to his palace in his native city of Corneto (now Tarquinia).
The centre of the composition is the face of the Madonna, who sits on a precious throne holding the Child. The attention to the volumes, inspired by Masaccio, is intermingled with the care for landscape and the light effects, which Lippi studied in the Flemish masters: the latter can be seen, for example, in details such as the pantoscopic view in the window on the left and the presence of precious objects.
References
- ^ Mariani, Valerio. "Fra Filippo Lippi". britannica.com. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
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- Pietà (Florence; c. 1430–1435)
- Enthroned Madonna and Child (c. 1437)
- Barbadori Altarpiece (1438)
- Pietà (Milan; 1437–1439)
- Penitent Saint Jerome with a Young Monk (c. 1439)
- Madonna and Child with Angels and Saints (c. 1440)
- Martelli Annunciation (c. 1440)
- Marsuppini Coronation (after 1444)
- Annunciation with Two Kneeling Donors (1440–1445)
- Novitiate Altarpiece (c. 1440–1445)
- Coronation of the Virgin (1441–1447)
- Annunciation (Munich; c. 1443–1450)
- Annunciation (Rome; c. 1445–1450)
- Saint Anthony Abbot and Michael the Archangel (c. 1445–1450)
- Alessandri Altarpiece (c. 1440–1453)
- Bartolini Tondo (1452–1453)
- Madonna del Ceppo (c. 1452–1453)
- Madonna and Child (Parma; c. 1450–1455)
- Annunciation (London; c. 1449–1459)
- Seven Saints (c. 1449–1459)
- Mystical Nativity (c. 1459)
- Adoration of the Magi (c. 1440–1460; with Fra Angelico)
- Funeral of Saint Jerome (1452–1460)
- Stories of Saint Stephen and Saint John the Baptist (1452–1465)
- Adoration of the Christ Child (c. 1463)
- Madonna and Child (Florence; c. 1450–1465)
- Adoration of the Christ Child (Prato; c. 1455–1466)
- Madonna of Palazzo Medici-Riccardi (c. 1466–1469)
- Life of the Virgin (1466–1469)
- Triptych of the Madonna of Humility with Saints (c. 1470)
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