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Europe 1300 - 1800
Course: Europe 1300 - 1800 > Unit 3
Lesson 3: Painting in central Italy- Gentile da Fabriano, Adoration of the Magi
- Gentile da Fabriano, Adoration of the Magi
- Gentile da Fabriano, Adoration of the Magi (reframed)
- Masaccio, Virgin and Child Enthroned
- Masaccio, The Holy Trinity
- Masaccio, Holy Trinity
- Masaccio, Holy Trinity (quiz)
- Masaccio, The Tribute Money in the Brancacci Chapel
- Masaccio, The Tribute Money in the Brancacci Chapel
- Masaccio, Tribute Money (quiz)
- Masaccio, Expulsion of Adam and Eve from Eden
- Fra Angelico, The Annunciation (Prado)
- Fra Angelico, The Annunciation
- Fra Angelico's Annunciation (quiz)
- Uccello, The Battle of San Romano
- Fra Filippo Lippi, Madonna and Child with two Angels
- Lippi, Madonna and Child with Two Angels
- Lippi, Madonna and Child with two Angels (quiz)
- Fra Filippo Lippi, Madonna and Child
- Lippi, Portrait of a Man and Woman at a Casement
- Fra Filippo Lippi, The Adoration
- Benozzo Gozzoli, The Medici Palace Chapel frescoes
- Beyond the Madonna, an early image of enslaved people in Renaissance Florence
- Veneziano, St. Lucy Altarpiece
- Antonio Pollaiuolo, Battle of Ten Nudes
- Perugino, Christ Giving the Keys of the Kingdom to St. Peter
- Ghirlandaio, Birth of the Virgin
- Cassone with the Conquest of Trebizond
- Botticelli, Primavera
- A celebration of beauty and love: Botticelli's Birth of Venus
- Botticelli, Birth of Venus (quiz)
- Botticelli, Portrait of a Man with a Medal of Cosimo il Vecchio de’ Medici
- Portraits and fashion: Sandro Botticelli, Portrait of a Young Woman
- Napoleon's booty — Perugino's (gorgeous) Decemviri Altarpiece
- The Early Renaissance in Florence (including painting, sculpture and architecture) (quiz)
- Piero della Francesca, The Baptism of Christ
- Piero della Francesca, Baptism of Christ (quiz)
- Piero della Francesca’s Flagellation of Christ
- A Renaissance masterpiece nearly lost in war: Piero della Francesca, The Resurrection
- Piero della Francesca, Resurrection
- Piero della Francesca, Portraits of the Duke and Duchess of Urbino
- Piero della Francesca, Portraits of the Duke and Duchess of Urbino (quiz)
- Signorelli, The Damned Cast into Hell
- Martini, Architectural Veduta
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Beyond the Madonna, an early image of enslaved people in Renaissance Florence
Filippino Lippi, Madonna and Child, c. 1483–84, tempera, oil, and gold on wood, 81.3 x 59.7 cm (The Metropolitan Museum of Art), an Expanding Renaissance Initiative video, find more at https://Smarthistory.org
Speakers: Dr. Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank and Dr. Beth Harris. Created by Smarthistory.
Want to join the conversation?
- Why are there so many Madonna and Child pictures in this time?(1 vote)
Video transcript
(swing piano music) - [Narrator 1] We're in the galleries at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, looking at a Renaissance
painting by Filippino Lippi of the Madonna and Child that was likely commissioned by one of the wealthiest
families in Florence, the Strozzi family. - [Narrator 2] This is a
typical Madonna and Child scene, it was very common at the time. We see Mary tenderly
holding Jesus as a baby, and he is very playfully
turning the pages of a book. Lippi has painted him to
look like an actual child, with all the naturalistic
baby fat and rolls. - [Narrator 1] And Mary, too,
looks like a human mother. She looks down at her child, although there is that sadness on her face that we frequently see in images of Mary holding the Christ-child, because there's this idea
that Mary has a foreboding, a sense of the tragedy that will come. - [Narrator 2] And they're seated inside a Florentine palace, and there's a window behind them that looks out onto a cityscape, and then beyond that we see it receding into this larger, hilly landscape. - [Narrator 1] Art historians think that the building that
we're seeing outside may be the Strozzi villa that was located outside of Florence. - [Narrator 2] And
there's evidence for this in the painting as well. If we look at the top
left, we see a portion of the armorial device
for the Strozzi family, and it was three crescent moons, of which we're seeing two in the painting. - [Narrator 1] To me, this
painting has everything that I expect of the Renaissance. It has figures who are naturalistic, who are three-dimensional. Lippi is using modeling to make the figures have
volume and take up space. There's a consideration for the human body, for human anatomy, which is especially evident in the figure of the
Christ-child who's nude. But there's also this love
of the material world. The blue fabric that feels like heavy blue woolen or velvety fabric, the translucency of the fabric that she wears around her head, the velvet of the cushion
that the book leans on, the carved wood, the brass candlestick, this embracing of the material
world in a spiritual image. - [Narrator 2] Part of
that interest in textures, in depicting these luxury materials in such a naturalistic way, is actually a result of something that's happening in Florence right at the time that Lippi is painting. This painting dates to around 1483, 1484. Just prior to this painting you have the introduction of
oil painting into Florence. You have the "Portinari Altarpiece" that has come with Tommaso Portinari, a Florentine banker who
is in Northern Europe, and he becomes very interested
in Flemish painting, where you have oil
painting that's developed. And he brings this "Portinari Altarpiece," the first oil painting
really to arrive in Florence, and it's a huge sensation. Artists like Lippi are drawn to it, and they begin to adapt oil
painting into their technique. - [Narrator 1] And you can see why Lippi wanted to paint with oils. Not only the depth of the color, the saturation of the color, but the way he's able to render the texture of different objects. For example, that velvet of the cushion, or the reflections on
the brass candlestick in the background, or even Christ's hair, which
we can see in little wisps. - [Narrator 2] It really
is a masterful pairing of the sacred and the secular, where we have Mary placed into a contemporary Florentine palace with a contemporary Florentine
landscape in the background. - [Narrator 1] Also that blue
of the cloak that she wears comes from a semiprecious stone, so it's especially valuable. - [Narrator 2] The blue of
her mantle is ultramarine, which derives from lapis lazuli, which comes from mines in Afghanistan, and it could only be mined
about six months of the year. At this time, in the late 15th century, lapis lazuli was more expensive than gold. It was an extremely precious material, and not everyone could afford it, but people like the
Strozzis could afford it, and they really wanted to put on display this material splendor. - [Narrator 1] What's
especially interesting about this painting too is
the view out the window, and specifically what we see there. - [Narrator 2] The
cityscape and the landscape that we see through the window is indebted to these Flemish
paintings and painters, where you often see rooms
then with a window outside where you can get this deeper
recession into the landscape. - [Narrator 1] We could think of paintings by artists like Rogier van der Weyden, where you have a spiritual scene, but a view out the window
of a contemporary landscape going deep into the distance, but where the artist has paid
a lot of attention to it, so that even though it's
far in the distance, there's quite a lot to see. And that's what we have here. - [Narrator 2] We're seeing two peasants that are crossing a bridge, carrying what look like
agricultural tools. We see a woman in the middle ground wearing this bright red dress,
so our eye is drawn to her, and she's pouring water into a pitcher. Further in the background we see two men who are spearfishing. Three of the five figures
that you see in the background are black Africans. This painting tells us a lot about what's happening in this
moment in terms of slavery. - [Narrator 1] The
Portuguese were engaging in the slave trade in West Africa, bringing slaves back to Europe. - [Narrator 2] The Ottomans, who had taken over Constantinople in 1453, disrupted the flow of the slaves from the Eastern Mediterranean. And so, with the Portuguese
exploration of Western Africa, they begin to trade for things, not only objects, but also people. Women in particular were more desirable. The figure in the red
dress in the background is an enslaved black African woman. - [Narrator 1] And we can assume that the two Africans who
are fishing in the background are also enslaved. - [Narrator 2] And it was
likely that there were many different enslaved
Sub-Saharan Africans here in places like Florence. Filippo Strozzi freed one of
his African slaves at his death as a way of trying to atone for one's sins, the sin of slavery. - [Narrator 1] And so
if you freed your slave, perhaps you had a better
chance of getting into heaven. - [Narrator 2] This painting
is really important, not only because it shows us a very typical scene of
the Madonna and Child in a very sumptuous way,
using lavish materials, but it reveals to us that there were many different types of people living in Renaissance Florence, even though we tend to forget that it's a much more
dynamic and complicated place than we usually think of. (swing piano music)