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Fra Filippo Lippi, Madonna and Child

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    (upbeat piano music)
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    Voiceover: We're in the
    National Gallery in Washington
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    looking at a lovely little Filippo Lippi
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    of a "Madonna and Child" from about 1440.
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    I suppose, this just is so lovely to me.
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    The beautiful soft curves of the headdress
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    that she wearing framing her face.
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    Voiceover: There's a kind
    of pathos in her face.
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    Madonna's so often shown
    beautiful but troubled
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    but her sense of fear
    and sadness comes across
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    in such an incredibly
    tender and intimate way.
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    And the way her hand holds
    him back protectively
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    this is that terrible pointed moment.
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    Voiceover: And looks out at us too,
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    in a sort of way saying,
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    "We all know what's going to happen."
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    "We all know what this means,
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    "but look at the price that I pay for this
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    "as a mother."
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    Voiceover: A little scorn.
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    Voiceover: The other
    thing that I see with this
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    is so obviously the early renaissance.
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    The lessons of the 15th century.
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    Mary becoming so much more human in
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    the ways we just described.
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    Christ looking so much more like a baby
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    than he did painted 100 years earlier.
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    Voiceover: The large head, chubby,
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    not looking like a small man.
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    Voiceover: Right
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    Voiceover: But the
    artist, here Lippi, being
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    comfortable with the notion
    that here we have God,
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    this divine figure,
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    in the body of a child.
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    Now he's looking down and
    slightly to his right.
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    Which suggests the original placement of
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    this painting.
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    Voiceover: And instead of that flat gold
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    background that we'd have
    had 100 years earlier
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    Lippi's created little
    niche for Mary to occupy
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    So we have some sense of space around her.
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    Very classical looking.
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    And then that shadow that
    her body casts to the right.
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    Voiceover: Yes.
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    Voiceover: So we have a sense of real
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    natural light coming from the left
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    casting a shadow.
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    A sense of her convincing
    three dimensionality here.
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    She's not a flat ethereal figure anymore.
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    Voiceover: It's really interesting.
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    She has that sense of physicality.
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    And this is such an expression
    of the 15th century,
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    in the classical architecture.
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    But also you are absolutely right
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    in the way in which the shadow actually
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    follows the complex contours
    of that architecture.
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    You're absolutely right.
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    Voiceover: The lesson of Masaccio.
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    But on the other hand
    there's a kind of softness
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    and lyrical quality to Lippi that
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    isn't in Masaccio.
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    To those beautiful little curves
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    around her face...
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    Voiceover: Or the
    Diaphanes-ness of that vail
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    is just gorgeous...
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    Voiceover: You can see how Lippi is
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    Botticelli's teacher.
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    This lovely gold foreshortened halo.
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    Although now that gold is disappearing
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    and the halo is disappearing.
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    It's just sort of speckled with gold.
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    Voiceover: In fact all the color is almost
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    gem-like with a kind of gentle radiance.
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    Voiceover: I love that
    he's on this little ledge,
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    like a window ledge.
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    Voiceover: Sometimes that's been read
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    as a reference to the eventual entombment.
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    But she holds him aloft from the tomb.
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    You know she protects him from it
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    with a kind of pillow.
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    Voiceover: Hard to remember when you're
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    looking at a painting in a museum,
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    that it's probably been damaged or
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    suffered some conservation efforts,
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    that may have not been as good as
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    we might have hoped.
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    Voiceover: Well the painting's
    almost 600 years old.
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    And it's gorgeous.
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    Voiceover: It still is.
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    (upbeat piano music)
Title:
Fra Filippo Lippi, Madonna and Child
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
03:14

English subtitles

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