Sort By:
Birth of Venus (detail)by Sandro Botticelli
12" x 12" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Birth of Venus (Head of Venus), 1486by Sandro Botticelli
14" x 11" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Detail: Venus and the Three Graces IIby Sandro Botticelli
16" x 20" Print Print
Detail: Venus and the Three Graces Iby Sandro Botticelli
16" x 20" Print Print
Story of Nastagio degli Onesti: The Disembowelment of the Woman Pursued, 1483-87by Sandro Botticelli
24" x 18" Print Print
+ More Sizes
Lamentation of Christ. c.1490by Sandro Botticelli
24" x 18" Print Print
+ More Sizes
La Primavera (Spring) Detail of Three Gracesby Sandro Botticelli
11" x 14" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Adoration of the Magi, c.1470by Sandro Botticelli
24" x 18" Print Print
+ More Sizes
Madonna of the Magnificat (detail)by Sandro Botticelli
15" x 10" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Detail: La Primaveraby Sandro Botticelli
11" x 14" Print Print
Detail: La Primaveraby Sandro Botticelli
16" x 20" Print Print
Story of Virginia, c.1500by Sandro Botticelli
24" x 18" Print Print
+ More Sizes
St. Augustine in his Cell, c.1480by Sandro Botticelli
18" x 24" Print Print
+ More Sizes
Mystic Nativity, 1500 (detail 2)by Sandro Botticelli
18" x 24" Print Print
+ More Sizes
Figure of Minerva (detail)by Sandro Botticelli
10" x 13" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Return of Judithby Sandro Botticelli
10" x 13" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Saint Augustine in his Cellby Sandro Botticelli
10" x 15" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Portrait of a Young Woman, 1485by Sandro Botticelli
10" x 15" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Kronung Mariaeby Sandro Botticelli
10" x 15" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Pallas Athena and the Centaur, 1482by Sandro Botticelli
9" x 13" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Temptation of Christ, 1481-1482by Sandro Botticelli
15" x 9" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Lamentation Over the Dead Christby Sandro Botticelli
10" x 15" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Enthroned Madonna with Child and Saintsby Sandro Botticelli
13" x 13" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Birth of Venusby Sandro Botticelli
24" x 18" Print Print
+ More Sizes
Primaveraby Sandro Botticelli
15" x 9" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
St. Thomas Aquinasby Sandro Botticelli
10" x 15" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Madonna of the Magnificatby Sandro Botticelli
16" x 16" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Madonna of the Book, 1480by Sandro Botticelli
10" x 15" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Venus and Mars, c.1485by Sandro Botticelli
24" x 18" Print Print
+ More Sizes
Mystic Nativity, 1500 (detail 1)by Sandro Botticelli
24" x 18" Print Print
+ More Sizes
Zephyr and Chloris, detail from The Birth of Venus, c.1485by Sandro Botticelli
18" x 24" Print Print
+ More Sizes
Illustration to the Divine Comedyby Sandro Botticelli
15" x 10" Art Print Print
+ More Sizes
Portrait of a Young Man, c.1480-85by Sandro Botticelli
18" x 24" Print Print
+ More Sizes
Wedding Feastby Sandro Botticelli
24" x 18" Print Print
+ More Sizes
Mystic Nativity, 1500by Sandro Botticelli
18" x 24" Print Print
+ More Sizes
Agony in the Garden, c.1500by Sandro Botticelli
18" x 24" Print Print
+ More Sizes
Sort By:
Alessandro di Mariano di Vanni Filipepi (c. 1445[1] – May 17, 1510), famously known as Sandro Botticelli, was a painter born in Florence, Italy. He belonged to the early Renaissance period. At the age of 14, Botticelli started out as a goldsmith apprentice, working for his brother, before moving to work with Filippo Lippi, a painter. It’s believed that he learned a lot artistically from Lippi, inspiring him to venture into art. By 1470, he had already established his workshop and started painting with a focus on figures and minimalistic effects of light. Botticelli’s most famous pieces are The Birth of Venus (1845) and Primavera (1478), and both have remained famous to date. His works were mainly influenced by Gothic realism and were very vivid in their expression, although he injected some level of ambiguity. Something that has made his works popular is their poetic and complex meanings as well as their philosophical undertones that continue to marvel scholars.
In the 1480s, Botticelli worked on several frescoes for different people. At the turn of the century, he started creating artistic works characterized with distorted forms and unnatural use of color, something that was reminiscent of Fra Angelico's paintings about a century earlier. After his death, people began to look at his works with more thoughtfulness and thus appreciated them more. They remained in churches, villas; among other private and public places. His approach consisted of using natural colors, ornamentation, and thin forms that easily made his works recognizable. Through years of work, Botticelli refined his style but still remained committed to the Florentine artistic traditions. His works are displayed in several museums and numerous framed Sandro Botticelli art sold by different galleries internationally.