With its striking depiction of the classical goddess of love and fertility at its centre, Sandro Botticelli’s The Birth of Venus (c1485) is one of the most famous and influential Renaissance artworks. And, as the UK curator, gallerist and video essayist James Payne details in this instalment from his series Great Art Explained, Botticelli’s painting is more than just masterful. Rather, with its preternatural style, depiction of female nudity and non-Christian imagery, it represented a turning point in the history of Western art. Detailing the social forces that made the painting possible, as well as Botticelli’s techniques and motifs, Payne explores how the revolutionary work melded humanist philosophy with contemporary Christianity.
Video by Great Art Explained
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Sports and games
Havana’s streets become racetracks in this exhilarating portrait of children at play
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Spirituality
Through rituals of prayer, a monk cultivates a quietly radical concept of freedom
4 minutes
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Design and fashion
A ceramicist puts her own bawdy spin on the folk language of pottery
14 minutes
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Art
Radical doodles – how ‘exquisite corpse’ games embodied the Surrealist movement
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Language and linguistics
Why Susan listens to recordings of herself speaking a language she no longer remembers
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Ethics
Plato saw little value in privacy. How do his ideas hold up in the information age?
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Home
How an artist transformed a dilapidated hunting lodge into a house made of dreams
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Animals and humans
Are zoos and natural history museums born of a desire to understand, or to control?
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Family life
The migrants missing in Mexico, and the mothers who won’t stop searching for them
21 minutes