Italian painter. Botticelli was Florentine
and extremely successful at the peak of his career, with
a highly individual and graceful style founded on the rhythmic
capabilities of outline. With the emergence of the High Renaissance
style at the turn of the 16th century, he fell out of fashion,
died in obscurity and was only returned to his position as
one of the best-loved quattrocento painters through the interest
of Ruskin and the Pre-Raphaelites.
His nickname "Botticelli" means "little barrel" and
was originally bestowed on his older brother. For some reason
the name was passed on to, and adopted by, the younger painter
brother.
"Botticelli's early years are obscure, but he seems to have been trained
in the studio of Filippo Lippi whose style informs his earliest dated work, the
Fortitude panel (1470, Florence, Uffizi). This was commissioned to be one of
a series of seven, the others having been executed by Piero Pollaiuolo.
A stylistic affinity here also with Pollaiuolo is perhaps
due to the patrons' requirements for unity within the series
(certainly it is never evident again). Many of Botticelli's
paintings are undated, but an Adoration
of the Magi (Florence, Uffizi) has been dated by modern
scholarship to c1475. This is important because it provides
evidence of Botticelli having already secured the patronage
of the Medici whose portraits (according to Vasari) appear
in the picture.
So well did this work establish Botticelli's reputation that
in 1481-82 he was commissioned to join Perugino, Ghirlandaio
and Rosselli (the most celebrated painters of the day) to
paint frescoes for the Sistine Chapel. Botticelli's two most
famous paintings were painted around this time, possibly
for Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de' Medici. They are the Primavera (c1478)
and the Birth of Venus (c1483),
both in the Uffizi.
These are mythologies, not of the capricious Ovidian sort,
but, it has been suggested, ones that embody the moral and
metaphysical Neoplatonic ideas that were then fashionable
in the Medici circles. Pure visual poetry, they are stylistically
the quintessence of Botticelli: there is a deliberate denial
of rational spatial construction and no attempt to model
solid-looking figures; instead the figures float on the forward
plane of the picture against a decorative landscape backdrop,
and form, defined by outline, is willfully modified to imbue
that outline with expressive power.
His workshop in these years was highly successful, one of
its most lucrative lines being panels depicting the Madonna
and Child, perhaps the most beautiful of which is the tondo
of the Madonna of the Magnificat (c1485,
Florence, Uffizi). Like his master Lippi, before him, Botticelli
has created his own instantly recognizable type of feminine
beauty, used for Madonnas and Venuses alike. His most remarkable
painting is also the only one that is signed, the Mystic
Nativity (1500, London, National Gallery).
It is deliberately archaic with hieratic differences in scale
(the Virgin and Child dwarfing the other figures) and carries
a cryptic inscription (partly erased) forecasting the end
of the present troubled world and the beginning of a new
order. Many of his works datable to this period seem to be
imbued with the same spiritual tension (which some scholars
have attributed to Botticelli's association with the hellfire
preacher Savonarola, although such an association has not
been substantiated).
During his last decade his style must have appeared absolutely
out of date and he seems to have done very little work. Without
doubt the High Renaissance style obscured his achievement
and, despite his earlier success, he had no followers of
any merit. His most important pupil was the son of his own
master, Filippino Lippi.