
Head of a Saint
Sandro Botticelli·1500
Historical Context
Sandro Botticelli painted this Head of a Saint around 1500 during his final years in Florence. This fragment or study may have been part of a larger composition. Botticelli's late devotional works reflect the spiritual intensity of his post-Savonarolan period, marked by angular forms and emotional gravity. The oil medium allowed for rich tonal transitions and glazed layers of color that created luminous depth impossible with the older tempera technique. Such devotional panels served both liturgical contexts in churches and chapels and private devotional use in the homes of wealthy families who maintained personal altars and oratories.
Technical Analysis
Tempera on panel with Botticelli's unmistakable linear style and refined drawing. The saint's features show the more austere, angular quality of his late period compared to the lyrical grace of his earlier work.






