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Named after his brother's nickname ('little barrel'), trained as a goldsmith, painted Venus on a shell, and may have burned his own paintings in a bonfire.

Where to see Sandro Botticelli
Ranked by works you can see in person.
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21 worksUffizi Gallery
borough 1, Italy
Also here (6)
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12 worksLouvre
Paris, France
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10 worksGemäldegalerie Berlin
Berlin, Germany
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9 works
National Gallery
Trafalgar Square, United Kingdom
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8 worksPhiladelphia Museum of Art
Philadelphia, United States
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6 worksCourtauld Gallery
Somerset House, United Kingdom
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6 worksNational Gallery of Art
Washington, D.C., United States
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4 worksMuseo del Prado
Madrid city, Spain
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4 worksMuseo Soumaya
Mexico City, Mexico
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0 worksKupferstichkabinett Berlin
Berlin, Germany
Sandro Botticelli prints
Hand-finished archival prints from Sandro Botticelli's body of work.
St. Augustine in his cell - Sandro Botticelli
From £28.00
Annunciation - Sandro Botticelli
From £28.00
The Extraction of the Heart of St. Ignatius - Sandro Botticelli
From £28.00
Madonna and Child with Two Angels - Sandro Botticelli
From £28.00
Madonna of the Rose Garden - Sandro Botticelli
From £37.00
Lamentation over the Dead Christ - Sandro Botticelli
From £28.00
Judith Leaving the Tent of Holofernes - Sandro Botticelli
From £28.00
Portrait of a Young Man with Red Cap - Sandro Botticelli
From £28.00
View all 55 museums
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4 worksMetropolitan Museum of Art
New York City, United States
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4 works
Musée du Petit Palais
Petit Palais in Avignon, France
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3 works
Sistine Chapel
Vatican City, Vatican City
Also here (3)
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3 worksGalleria dell'Accademia
borough 1, Italy
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3 worksFitzwilliam Museum
Cambridge, United Kingdom
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3 worksIsabella Stewart Gardner Museum
Boston, United States
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3 worksNational Gallery of Canada
Rideau-Vanier Ward, Canada
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3 worksGalleria Palatina
Palazzo Pitti, Italy
Also here (4)
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3 worksAccademia Carrara
Bergamo, Italy
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3 worksNational Galleries Scotland
Edinburgh, United Kingdom
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2 works
Cook collection
Doughty House, United Kingdom
Also here (2)
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2 worksPushkin Museum of Fine Arts
Moscow, Russia
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2 worksClark Art Institute
Massachusetts, United States
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2 worksBasilica of Santa Maria Novella
Historic Centre of Florence, Italy
Also here (2)
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2 worksStaatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden
Dresden, Germany
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2 worksPalazzo Pallavicini-Rospigliosi
Rome, Italy
Also here (3)
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2 worksMuseo Poldi Pezzoli
Palazzo Moriggia Della Porta, Italy
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2 worksHermitage Museum
Winter Palace, Russia
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2 worksHarvard Art Museums
Cambridge, United States
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2 worksArt Institute of Chicago
Chicago, United States
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2 works
Indianapolis Museum of Art
Indianapolis, United States
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2 works
Fogg Museum
Cambridge, United States
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2 works
Galleria Sabauda
Turin, Italy
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2 worksDetroit Institute of Arts
Midtown Detroit, United States
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2 worksMusée Jacquemart-André
hôtel Jacquemart-André, France
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2 worksMuseum of Fine Arts, Houston
Houston, United States
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1 worksSão Paulo Museum of Art
Paulista Avenue, Brazil
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1 worksCincinnati Art Museum
Eden Park, United States
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1 works
Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum
Glasgow, United Kingdom
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1 worksBarber Institute of Fine Arts
University of Birmingham, United Kingdom
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1 works
North Carolina Museum of Art
Raleigh, United States
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1 worksStädel Museum
Frankfurt, Germany
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1 worksBristol City Museum & Art Gallery
City of Bristol, United Kingdom
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1 works
Museum of Fine Arts Boston
Boston, United States
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1 worksCleveland Museum of Art
Wade Park, United States
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1 worksNational Museum Cardiff
Castle, United Kingdom
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1 works
British Museum
building of the British Museum, United Kingdom
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1 works
Paul G. Allen Collection
Seattle, United States
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1 worksYale University Art Gallery
Yale University Art Gallery Swartwout Building, United States
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1 worksBaltimore Museum of Art
Charles Village, United States
5 more museums hold works by Sandro Botticelli with smaller collections, not listed here.
Can't travel? Bring Sandro Botticelli home.
See all Sandro Botticelli prints →Frequently Asked Questions
When did Sandro Botticelli live?
Alessandro di Mariano di Vanni Filipepi, known as Sandro Botticelli, was born in Florence in 1445. Sandro Botticelli died in 1510, largely forgotten, and was not rediscovered until the Pre-Raphaelites championed him in the nineteenth century.Was Sandro Botticelli religious?
Sandro Botticelli was called to Rome to participate in the decoration of the Sistine Chapel. He was assigned to paint mainly historical themes.Is Sandro Botticelli a renaissance artist?
Sandro Botticelli is a Renaissance artist. His paintings reflect the fine draughtsmanship that was fundamental to Florentine art at that time.Did Sandro Botticelli live during the renaissance?
Sandro Botticelli lived during the Renaissance. He painted the first large-scale Renaissance painting of a mythological subject and is believed to have painted the first Renaissance nude painting in Europe.Who was Sandro Botticelli's teacher?
Sandro Botticelli was apprenticed to a goldsmith and then to the painter Fra Filippo Lippi. Lippi's delicate line and pale colouring shaped everything Botticelli went on to do.Did Sandro Botticelli burn his paintings?
Sandro Botticelli may have burned some of his own paintings in the Bonfire of the Vanities in 1497. Whether this represents genuine religious conversion or political self-preservation is unclear.Was Sandro Botticelli a medici?
Although Sandro Botticelli worked in Florence under the patronage of the Medici family, there is no indication he was a Medici himself. However, a playful poem by Lorenzo de' Medici may refer to him.Why did Sandro Botticelli create art?
Among the Florentine artists of the second half of the fifteenth century who strove for a solution to this question was Sandro Botticelli. One of his most famous pictures represents not a Christian legend but a classical myth, The Birth of Venus.
Sources
Where to See guide aggregates verified holdings of Sandro Botticelli's works across the following collections.
- [1] museum Courtauld Gallery Used for: museum holdings.
- [2] museum Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts Used for: museum holdings.
- [3] museum Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Used for: museum holdings.
- [4] museum Clark Art Institute Used for: museum holdings.
- [5] museum Basilica of Santa Maria Novella Used for: museum holdings.
- [6] museum Barber Institute of Fine Arts Used for: museum holdings.
- [7] book Judith Anne Testa, An Art Lover's Guide to Florence Used for: biography.
- [8] book Susie Hodge, Art Used for: biography, stylistic analysis.
- [9] book Beard, Lee, 1973- author, Butler, Adam, author; Van Cleave, Claire, author; Fortenberry, Diane, author; Stirling, Susan, author, Beard, Lee, 1973- author, Butler, Adam, author; Van Cleave, Claire, author; Fortenberry, Diane, author; Stirling, Susan, author - The Art Book_ New Edition, Mini Format Used for: biography, stylistic analysis.
- [10] book Ana Debenedetti;, Botticelli Used for: biography.
- [11] book [work edited by Federico Zeri; text based on the interviews between Federico Zeri and Marco Dolcetta; chief editor of 2000 English language edition, Elena Mazour; English translation, Susan Scott], Botticelli_ Allegory of Spring (One Hundred Pa Used for: biography.
- [12] book Miles J. Unger, Michelangelo Used for: biography.
- [13] book Gabriele Mandel, The complete paintings of Botticelli Used for: biography.
- [14] book Gabriele Mandel, The complete paintings of Botticelli_1 Used for: biography.
- [15] book E. H. Gombrich, The Story of Art - 16th Edition Used for: biography, stylistic analysis.
- [16] book Beckett, Wendy, The story of painting Used for: stylistic analysis.
Editorial overseen by Solis Prints. Sources verified 2026-06-28. Click a source for details, or hover over [N] in the page above to preview.
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