1 / 44

Baroque Slides You Must Know

Baroque Slides You Must Know. Bernini The Baldacchino 1624 bronze, partly gilt St. Peter’s, Vatican. Bernini Saint Teresa of Avila in Ecstasy 1647-52 marble Cappella Cornaro, Santa Maria della Vittoria, Rome This sculpture represents Saint Teresa as she has a vision.

Download Presentation

Baroque Slides You Must Know

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Baroque Slides You Must Know

  2. BerniniThe Baldacchino1624bronze, partly giltSt. Peter’s, Vatican

  3. BerniniSaint Teresa of Avila in Ecstasy 1647-52 marbleCappella Cornaro, Santa Maria della Vittoria, Rome This sculpture represents Saint Teresa as she has a vision.

  4. Portal of the Hospicio de San FernandoPerdo de Ribera1722Madrid

  5. DavidBernini1623-1624marble Bernini’s David is considered an excellent example of Baroque sculpture, because the extremely energized figure of David seems to be about to attack Goliath, thereby drawing the viewer into the action of the “frame.” Bernini’s David is considered an excellent example of Baroque sculpture, because David’s pose seems to press into the viewer’s space and forces the viewer to be an actual spectator in David battle against Goliath.

  6. Louis XIV 1701 Hyacinthe Rigaud the Sun King, age 63—he succeeded to the crown at age five; he died when he was 77. He was king for seventy-two years. How has power been constructed through this image? Hints: ermine, sword, classical architecture, crwon, fluer-de-lis, gaze of the subject... How has the subject’s gender been constructed—emphasized? What seems contradictory to our contemporary eye? Hints: high-heeled shoes, stockings, long luxuriant locks, femininized pose of the lower-half of his body...

  7. Palais de Versailles Louis Le Vau Jules Hardouin-Mansart 1668-85 Andre Le Notre designed the gardens. See the official website: en.chateauversailles.fr

  8. Hall of Mirrors Do you remember the Treaty of Versailles that formally ended WWI? The treaty was signed in this room on 29 June 1919. Think of that moment as the beginning of WWII.

  9. Plan of Palais de Versailles Louis Le Vau and Jules Hardouin-Mansart 1668-85 Andre Le Notre designed the gardens.

  10. Sick BacchusCaravaggio1593oil on canvas This early work breaks all the rules.Who is Bacchus?

  11. Boy Bitten by a LizardCaravaggio1594oil on canvas This early work is a demonstration of virtuosity.What is Caravaggio proving that he can “do” as a painter?What do you notice?

  12. DavidCaravaggio1609-10oil on canvas The head of Goliath is a self-portrait of Caravaggio.

  13. The Calling of St. MatthewCaravaggio1599-1600oil on canvasContarelli Chapel, San Luigi dei Francesi, Rome

  14. Magdalen with the Smoking FlameGeorge de La Tourc. 1640oil on canvas

  15. Christ in the Carpenter's ShopGeorge de La Tour1645oil on canvas

  16. The Water Seller of SevilleDiego Velázquez 1623 oil on canvas

  17. The most important fortress in the southern Netherlands was Breda in Brabant.Velázquez represents Spinola (Philip IV’s Spanish commander) as having dismounted from his horse to meet the Dutch commander, Justinus of Nassau, on equal footing. Instead of accepting the token of surrender, he places a hand on the Dutchman's shoulder, offering a consolation of one soldier to another. The Surrender at Breda (The Lances) Diego Velázquez 1634-35 oil on canvas

  18. Las Meninas or The Family of Philip IVDiego Velázquez 1656-1657 oil on canvas

  19. The Rokeby Venus or The Toliet of Venus ca. 1650

  20. Jan Vermeer Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window1657

  21. Jan Vermeer Woman Holding a Balancec. 1664

  22. Jan Vermeer The Milkmaidca. 1658

  23. Jan Vermeer A Woman Asleep at Table1657

  24. Jan Vermeer Girl with Pearl Earringca. 1665

  25. Jan Vermeer View of Delft 1659-1660

  26. Jan Vermeer The Little Street1657-58

  27. Jan Vermeer The Art of Paintingca. 1665-1667

  28. Self-PortraitRembrandt1659oil on canvas

  29. Portrait of Saskia with FlowerRembrandt1641oil on canvas

  30. Bathsheba at Her BathRembrandt1654oil on canvas

  31. The Jewish Bride Rembrandt c. 1665 oil on canvas

  32. Rembrandt Self-Portrait1639

  33. Rembrandt The Sacrifice of Isaac1655

  34. Baroque Art: Types of Paintings • religious images • portraits • history paintings • still lifes • genre* (scenes from every day life) • * Genre painting is a fairly new development at the end of the 16th century (1580’s).

  35. Religious Images • EntombmentCaravaggio1603-1604oil on canvas • What makes this image a “Baroque” work? • This is an open composition in which elements are seem to move diagonally in space. • Caravaggio has used rich colors and dramatic contrasts of light and dark. • This work demonstrates tenebrism: a technique in which forms emerge from a dark background into a strong light that often falls from a single source outside the painting. • Caravaggio has attempted to depict this scene with as much realism as possible.

  36. Portraits • Catharina Hooft and Her NurseFrans Hals1620oil on canvas • What makes this portrait a “Baroque” work? • Hals has used a loose, free technique; the viewer can see the evidence of his brushwork—of the movement of the brush as it constructs the image on the two-dimensional plane of the canvas. • Hals has used a dramatic contrast of light and dark; the two figures emerge from a dark background into a strong light. • Hals has attempted to portray the two individuals as realistically as possible; note the careful depiction of textures.

  37. History Paintings The most important fortress in the southern Netherlands was Breda in Brabant.Velázquez represents Spinola (Philip IV’s Spanish commander) as having dismounted from his horse to meet the Dutch commander, Justinus of Nassau, on equal footing. Instead of accepting the token of surrender, he places a hand on the Dutchman's shoulder, offering a consolation of one soldier to another. The Surrender at Breda (The Lances) Diego Velázquez 1634-35 oil on canvas

  38. Still Lifes Still Life with FlowersRachel Ruysch1716oil on canvas Nota bene: While the artist is extremely invested in created a naturalistic representation of the flowers, this image was not made from “life”—Ruysch has created a composite of different flowers. She would make sketches of different flowers and fruits and then “assemble” the individual images in one still life. Notice the tulip at the upper center of the image. Tulip mania or tulipomania was a period in the Dutch Golden Age—which roughly speaking spanned the 17th century—during which contract prices for bulbs of the recently introduced tulip reached extraordinarily high levels and then suddenly collapsed. At the peak of tulip mania, in February 1637, some single tulip bulbs sold for more than 10 times the annual income of a skilled craftsman. It is generally considered the first recorded speculative bubble. Tulips were imported first from the Ottoman Empire during the reign of our friend Suleyman the Magnificent—remember his tughra?

  39. Genre Woman Holding a BalanceJan Vermeerc. 1664oil on canvas Vanitas Theme: the transitory nature of life (life is brief); the woman is weighing the value of “something;” notice the Last Judgment painting behind her?; notice the light that illuminates her hands and forehead?

  40. ArnolfiniPortrait Jan van Eyck1434 portrait, of course…genre too?even a still life?

  41. Merode AltarpieceRobert Campin 1425-1428 a religious image of course…portrait of the patrons on the left and even the artist…right?genre as well?even a still life, perhaps?

More Related