Madonna and Child with Two Angels (c. 1465 C.E.) is a tempera-on-wood panel by Fra Filippo Lippi showing the Virgin Mary as a fashionable, lifelike young woman, made for private devotion and a core AP Art History example of Renaissance naturalism reshaping religious imagery (Unit 3, Topic 3.4).
Madonna and Child with Two Angels is a tempera-on-wood panel painted around 1465 C.E. by the Florentine friar-painter Fra Filippo Lippi. The subject is ancient (Mary holding the Christ Child has been painted for over a thousand years) but Lippi's treatment is radically new. Mary looks like a real, contemporary Florentine woman, with an elaborate pearl-studded hairstyle and a halo so faint it's nearly transparent. One angel turns and grins right at you, pulling you into the scene. A naturalistic landscape stretches behind them, a detail that shows Italian painters absorbing ideas from Northern European art.
This was a devotional object, almost certainly made for private prayer in a wealthy home rather than for a church altar. That matters for Topic 3.4, which is all about how purpose, audience, and patronage shape art. A private patron wanted an image that felt intimate and emotionally accessible, so Lippi made the holy figures human. The painting is essentially a thousand-year-old sacred subject filtered through Renaissance humanism, where the divine starts to look like your neighbor.
This work sits in Unit 3 (Early Europe and Colonial Americas, 200-1750 CE) under Topic 3.4 and directly supports learning objective 3.4.A, explaining how purpose, intended audience, or patron affect art and art making. The CED's essential knowledge (PAA-1.A.5) stresses that individual patronage shaped the production, content, form, and display of panel paintings, and that art served devotional functions in churches, chapels, and palaces. Lippi's Madonna checks every box. It's a panel painting, privately commissioned, devotional in function, and displayed in a domestic setting. It's also one of the clearest examples in the image set of the big Unit 3 story arc, the shift from flat, otherworldly Byzantine icons to naturalistic Renaissance figures, which makes it perfect ammo for continuity-and-change and comparison essays.
Keep studying AP® Art History Unit 3
Virgin (Theotokos) and Child between Saints Theodore and George (Unit 3)
Same subject, same devotional function, opposite visual language. The Byzantine icon keeps Mary flat, frontal, and remote to signal her divinity, while Lippi makes her a warm, individualized human. Pairing these two is the classic AP move for showing change over time in devotional art.
Annunciation Triptych (Merode Altarpiece) (Unit 3)
Both are smaller-scale religious works made for private devotion in a home rather than a church, and both reflect what an individual patron wanted. The Merode Altarpiece does it with Northern symbolic detail; Lippi does it with Italian naturalism and idealized beauty.
Affective spirituality (Unit 3)
Lippi's relatable, tender Mary is built to trigger an emotional response from the viewer at prayer. That goal of feeling your way into a sacred scene, not just looking at it, is the same devotional logic behind emotionally charged works like the Röttgen Pietà.
Counter-Reformation (Unit 3)
Lippi's nearly halo-free, fashionably dressed Madonna shows how far Renaissance artists pushed the humanization of sacred figures. A century later, the Catholic Church's Counter-Reformation pushed back, demanding religious art that kept clarity and reverence front and center.
Expect this work in multiple-choice questions about patronage, function, and Renaissance naturalism, and as a strong free-response pick whenever a prompt asks for a devotional object or a work shaped by its intended audience. The 2017 LEQ used the Byzantine Virgin (Theotokos) and Child as a stimulus and asked you to select another work intended to function as a devotional object; Lippi's Madonna is a textbook answer for that kind of prompt. You need to do three things with it: identify it completely (Fra Filippo Lippi, c. 1465 C.E., tempera on wood), describe specific visual evidence (the contemporary hairstyle, the faint halo, the smiling angel, the landscape), and connect that evidence to function and audience, meaning private devotion for an elite patron who wanted an emotionally accessible Mary.
Both depict Mary and the Christ Child as devotional objects, so it's easy to blur them on an ID. The Theotokos is a 6th-7th century Byzantine encaustic icon with flat, frontal, gold-haloed figures meant to feel timeless and divine. Lippi's panel is a c. 1465 Renaissance tempera painting where Mary is modeled in light and shadow, dressed in contemporary fashion, and set against a real landscape. Quick check: gold and frontal means Byzantine icon; naturalistic and fashionable means Lippi.
Madonna and Child with Two Angels was painted by Fra Filippo Lippi around 1465 C.E. in tempera on wood, and it appears in Unit 3 under Topic 3.4.
It was made as a private devotional object, so its intimate scale and emotionally warm figures directly reflect the needs of an individual patron, which is the core idea of learning objective 3.4.A.
Lippi humanizes the sacred by giving Mary a fashionable Florentine hairstyle, a nearly invisible halo, and lifelike modeling, while one angel grins straight at the viewer.
The naturalistic landscape in the background shows Italian Renaissance painters borrowing from Northern European art, a useful cross-regional point for essays.
On the exam, this work is your go-to evidence for contrasting Renaissance naturalism with the flat, otherworldly style of earlier Byzantine icons of the Virgin and Child.
It's a tempera-on-wood panel painted by Fra Filippo Lippi around 1465 C.E., showing the Virgin Mary and Christ Child as lifelike, contemporary figures. It's a required Unit 3 work that illustrates how private patronage and devotional purpose shaped Renaissance art (Topic 3.4).
No. It's a devotional panel made for private prayer, most likely in a wealthy Florentine home, not a church altarpiece. That domestic, individual audience explains its intimate scale and approachable, humanized Mary.
The Byzantine icon (6th-7th century, encaustic) presents Mary as flat, frontal, and divinely remote with bold gold halos. Lippi's c. 1465 panel makes her naturalistic and fashionable, with a barely visible halo and a real landscape behind her. Same devotional function, completely different visual language, which is why the pair is a favorite for comparison questions.
That's the point. Renaissance humanism pushed artists to make sacred figures relatable, so Lippi gave Mary a real woman's face, pearls, and contemporary dress to help a viewer at prayer connect emotionally. Tradition holds the model may have been Lucrezia Buti, a nun with whom Lippi had a relationship.
A complete identification means artist (Fra Filippo Lippi), date (c. 1465 C.E.), and materials (tempera on wood). Then be ready to link visual evidence, like the faint halo and smiling angel, to its function as a private devotional object.
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