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An Allegory
Sandro Botticelli·1520
Historical Context
Sandro Botticelli painted this Allegory around 1495, a late work that reflects his growing interest in allegorical and moral subjects as Savonarola's preaching transformed the cultural atmosphere of Florence. Botticelli's allegorical paintings of this period—like his Calumny of Apelles—drew on classical literary sources to create moral commentaries on human behavior, and his late style shows both the linear precision of his early work and the more intense emotional register of his final period. The allegorical mode allowed painters to treat subjects that would have been impossible in purely devotional or secular contexts, the classical or mythological allegory providing a framework for moral or political commentary under the guise of abstract virtue. Botticelli's allegories occupy a special place in his output as works that combined his classical learning with his increasingly intense religious concerns.
Technical Analysis
The composition employs the graceful, flowing lines and idealized figure types associated with Botticelli's circle. The allegorical subject matter is conveyed through symbolic figures and attributes that invite learned interpretation.
Look Closer
- ◆The allegorical figures are arranged in a processional or confrontational grouping — their postures and attributes carrying specific moral meaning for a literate Florentine viewer.
- ◆The late date — around 1495 — means this is Botticelli working under the shadow of Savonarola, and an anxious moral seriousness replaces his earlier lyrical ease.
- ◆The figures' faces carry the elongated, sharp-featured quality of his late style — beauty that has become austere rather than charming.
- ◆A landscape or architectural setting is used symbolically rather than naturalistically — space organized by meaning rather than perspective.
- ◆The gestures between figures form a visual argument — pointing, presenting, turning away — an allegory legible through posture rather than inscription.






