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The Madonna of Humility by Lippo di Dalmasio

The Madonna of Humility

Lippo di Dalmasio·1395

Historical Context

Lippo di Dalmasio was a Bolognese painter known for his gentle, devotional Madonnas that earned him the nickname 'Lippo delle Madonne.' This Madonna of Humility, dating to around 1395 and now in the National Gallery, London, depicts the Virgin seated on the ground with the Christ Child, an iconographic type that originated in Siena around 1340 and spread rapidly across Italy. Lippo's tender interpretation exemplifies the intimate, emotionally accessible devotional art that characterized late Gothic Bolognese painting.

Technical Analysis

Executed in egg tempera on panel with gold ground, the painting demonstrates Lippo's hallmark qualities: softly rounded facial features, a gentle sfumato-like modeling of flesh, and a warm palette dominated by ultramarine and rose that creates an atmosphere of tender maternal devotion.

See It In Person

National Gallery

London, United Kingdom

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Quick Facts

Medium
Tempera on panel
Dimensions
110 × 87 cm
Era
Gothic
Style
Italian Gothic
Genre
Religious
Location
National Gallery, London
View on museum website →

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