Madonna and Child with Two Angels. Madonna with Child is a painting by the Italian Renaissance artist Filippo Lippi.
The date in which it was executed is unknown, but most art historians agree that it was painted during the last part of Lippi's career, between 1450 and 1465. It is one of the few works by Lippi which was not executed with the help of his workshop and was an influential model for later depictions of the Madonna and Child, including those by Sandro Botticelli.
The painting is housed in the Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy, and is therefore commonly called The Uffizi Madonna among art historians. Fra Filippo was born in 1406 in Florence to a poor family where his father was a butcher.
He entered a monastery with his brother at an early age. Later in his life, he was moved to a monastery in Prato, and here fell in love with a nun, Lucrezia Buti, with whom he had two children.
He encountered more trouble when his patrons claimed that Fra Filippo did not fulfill his contracts. Fra Filippo's main patrons were the Medicis. The commission and the exact execution date of the painting are unknown. In 1457, Giovanni de' Medici wished to gift a panel to the King of Naples and commissioned Fra Filippo to paint it. Fra Filippo, who was working in Prato at that time, decided to temporarily return to his residence in Florence to work on this project. Fra Filippo wrote letters to Giovanni that show that the painter