Angelica Maria Praying
From a painting by Fra Filippo Lippi

 Angelica Maria   13" H
Bonded White Marble on Alabaster Base
$212 (less Internet discount of $26) = $186
(freight $14)
The rich commercial life of Florence had given rise to a wealthy leisure class before the middle of the fifteenth century. It was a worldly class and it found delight in pretty faces. Fra Filippo Lippi was well qualified to give pictures which these Florentines could enjoy. He took considerable pleasure in viewing pretty faces himself. In spite of monastic ties which he had unfortunately contracted as a mere boy, he found himslef often involved in amorous adventures. He was obliged to paint pictures for altarpieces, pictures appropriate to religious settings, but for him it was enough to paint a pretty girl for her beauty alone. Such was the Madonna that he painted in about 1440. That painting now hangs in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence. It is the picture from which Angelica Maria was taken. It is thought that the pretty girl was Lucrezia Buti, a beautiful nun in the convent where he was the chaplain. Out of wedlock she bore him a son, Filippino Lippi who also became a great painter. By dispensation from the Pope, Lucrezia later became the wife of Filippo Lippi. He was a masterful painter who painted with an imagination and grace that were distinctive in the early Renaissance. The beauty of line which he saw in the face of this charming Florentine girl has made it an appealing subject for the statue.