
Portrait of a Woman with a Man at a Casement
Filippo Lippi·1440
Historical Context
This portrait, dating to 1440, is by Filippo Lippi, who Carmelite friar-painter born around 1406, trained in the Carmelite convent of Santa Maria del Carmine in Florence. Profoundly influenced by Masaccio, he developed a lyrical, sweetly expressive style. The portrait reflects the artist's engagement with the demands of elite patronage, capturing individual character within the conventions of Renaissance portraiture. Such commissions formed the economic backbone of most painters' careers and provide valuable documents of the social world in which they operated.
Technical Analysis
The painting demonstrates the technical command expected of Renaissance painters, with careful attention to compositional structure, tonal modeling, and the rendering of form through light and shadow that characterized the period's artistic achievements.





