Filippino Lippi, 'The Virgin and Child with Saint John', about 1480
About the work
Overview
This painting is among the earliest known works by Filippino Lippi, probably made when he was still a member of the workshop of the Florentine painter Sandro Botticelli. It shows the Virgin Mary holding the infant Christ in her right arm. He plucks seeds from a pomegranate – the fruit was a symbol of the Passion (his torture and crucifixion).
Christ’s cousin, Saint John the Baptist, looks on in wonder, holding his reed cross and clutching at the folds of his red cloak. A book lies open on the marble sill in the foreground, its text illegible. The vase with flowers may allude to the Virgin, who was thought of as a vessel from which the Christ Child came. A mountainous landscape opens out behind the group, with a little city in the distance.
Small paintings of the Virgin and Child with the young Saint John the Baptist were an important source of income for artists in fifteenth-century Florence; they usually decorated the chambers of their owners.
Key facts
Details
- Full title
- The Virgin and Child with Saint John
- Artist
- Filippino Lippi
- Artist dates
- about 1457 - 1504
- Date made
- about 1480
- Medium and support
- egg tempera on wood
- Dimensions
- 59.1 × 43.8 cm
- Acquisition credit
- Bought, 1894
- Inventory number
- NG1412
- Location
- Not on display
- Collection
- Main Collection
- Previous owners
- Frame
- 19th-century Italian Frame
Provenance
Additional information
Text extracted from the ‘Provenance’ section of the catalogue entry in Martin Davies, ‘National Gallery Catalogues: The Earlier Italian Schools’, London 1986; for further information, see the full catalogue entry.
Bibliography
-
1951Davies, Martin, National Gallery Catalogues: The Earlier Italian Schools, London 1951
-
1986Davies, Martin, National Gallery Catalogues: The Earlier Italian Schools, revised edn, London 1986
-
2001
C. Baker and T. Henry, The National Gallery: Complete Illustrated Catalogue, London 2001
About this record
If you know more about this painting or have spotted an error, please contact us. Please note that exhibition histories are listed from 2009 onwards. Bibliographies may not be complete; more comprehensive information is available in the National Gallery Library.