La Primavera, large tempera painting on a poplar wood panel by Sandro Botticelli. It is believed to have been executed about 1477 to 1482. The mythological figures in the painting are an allegory of spring and of the kindling of love.
After training as a goldsmith, Botticelli was apprenticed to Fra Filippo Lippi. Lippi had developed a style of portraying expressive interactions between figures and of employing highly decorative detailing typical of the late Gothic period. Botticelli was also influenced by Antonio Pollaiuolo, whose muscular modeling announced a new approach to figurative work accounting for human anatomy and proportion. Botticelli painted on many scales, and his delicate evocations of landscape and figuration ensure his place as one of the most beloved painters of all time.
La Primavera (Spring) commemorated the Florentine Renaissance—a cultural, political, and economic rebirth of the Florentine Republic. The painting originally hung in the summerhouse of the Medici family as a companion piece to The Birth of Venus. In La Primavera, Botticelli has created a lively scene that includes, from left to right, the mythological figures Mercury; the Three Graces; Venus, goddess of love; the nymph Chloris; Flora, goddess of fecundity; and the west wind Zephyr. Above them, Cupid, the god of erotic love, aims his dart at the Three Graces.
Some scholars have argued that the painting is an example of Botticelli’s interest in Neoplatonism—a blending of pagan and Christian identities. However, it is probable that he painted this mythological scene because he was commissioned to do so by the Medicis, whose interest in classical history and art influenced many painters of this time.