1 / 27

Mannerism in Italy

Mannerism in Italy. Mannerism (In Italy 1520-1580, everywhere else - lasted until 17 th Cent.). Born as a reaction against naturalism, order and balance of the High Renaissance “ Maniera ” ( Italian ) - style, stylishness

miyoko
Download Presentation

Mannerism in Italy

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. Mannerism in Italy

  2. Mannerism(In Italy 1520-1580, everywhere else - lasted until 17th Cent.) • Born as a reaction against naturalism, order and balance of the High Renaissance • “Maniera” (Italian) - style, stylishness • Intellectual sophistication – work directed towards a small audience who understands art • It’s art based on art, not art based on nature • Artificial, highly theatrical, dramatic lighting effects, exaggerated emotions, elongated figures, etc.

  3. Mannerism • Entombment, Pontormo, 1525-28 • http://smarthistory.org/pontormo-entombment.html

  4. NorthernRenaissance

  5. North. Renaissance – 1400-1520 • Is the term usedto describe theRenaissance inNorthern Europe (England, France, Germany, Netherlands).

  6. North. Renaissance – 1400-1520 • Universities, the printed press and the development of trade helped to spreadideas throughout Europe.

  7. Northern Renaissance - Medium: • Oil on panel (used due to wet, cold climate) • Brighter, richer and deeper colors, smoother transitions, more realistic 3D rendering • Small scale wood panels - are easy to transport & view in a private, domestic setting - helped the middle class to create an illusion of wealth and high social status • Panels were treated as precious objects that arepart of the spectator’s world and at the same timeset off from the mundane world of everyday existence.

  8. Italian vs Northern Renaissance Italy - Subject matter: Classical mythology and religious iconography, portraiture much less common than in Netherlands Northern Europe - Subject matter: Domestic interiors, portraits and religious scenes

  9. Jan Van Eyck • Was an official court artist inBrugges (Belgium) • Is known for a microscopic-telescopic vision: an exceptionally realistic style of painting • Invented oil paint • His is full of religious symbolism Man in a Red Turban (Self-Portrait), Jan van Eyck, tempera and oil on panel, 1433

  10. Jan Van Eyck “Jan van Eyck painted the world as if everything in it were both knowable and perfectly known... His aim was not representation, but reconstruction”- Panofsky. Each object, is spiritualized by its almost total detail: his scrutiny goes beyond the concrete and waits for our symbolic imagination to catch up with it. • Portrait of Margaret van Eyck, • Jan van Eyck, oil on panel, 1439

  11. Portrait of a Carthusian, PetrusChristus, oil on panel, 1446 • http://smarthistory.org/petrus-christus-portrait.html

  12. Italy - Style & Technique: • Artists study from nature (learn anatomy, etc.) • Space is constructed using 1-point linear perspective • The ideal of beauty and harmony is based on classical art • Frequent use of symmetry and balance • Desire to make the images of the visible world more believable and accessible. The view of reality is more generalized, not fragmented like in the Netherlands.

  13. Italian Renaissance vs Northern Renaissance In Italy, the realism was based on the use of science (anatomy) and math (linear perspective and geometry). The realism of the Northern Renaissance was based on a very close observation of the world.

  14. Italy - Style & Technique • Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saints, Raphael, 1504

  15. North - Style & Technique: 1. Exquisite and minute surface detail, microscopic view of the world 2. Naturalism, use of illusionistic trompl’oil effects 3. Northern works are smaller scale, private, psychologically intimate

  16. Style & Technique • Merod Altarpiece, Robert Campin, oil on panel, 1426, (25” x 24” center, 25” x 10” each wing) • http://smarthistory.org/Campin.html

  17. Northern - Style & Technique: 4. Often combined multiple perspectives in 1 painting to emphasize different realities: religious and secular. 5. Artists had insistent interest in the individual, withall its quirks and peculiarities. They refused to generalize and simplify. 6. Full of symbolic iconography, which awakens emotions of the pious (everyday objects symbolize spiritual ideas).

  18. Albreht Durer • Was a German painter, printmaker and theorist, born in Nuremberg in 1471 • He became very famous by his mid-twenties. • Dürer painted his 1st self-portrait for his fiancé. • Self-portrait, Albrecht Durer, oil on panel, 1493 (left) – before his trip to Italy

  19. Albreht Durer • The second self-portrait was painted after his trip to Italy, where he studied with the great masters in Venice, Padua, etc. • Self-portrait, Albrecht Durer, oil on panel, 1500 (left) – after his trip to Italy

  20. The Protestant Reformation - 1517 • The movement began with Martin Luther in 1517as an attempt to reform the Roman Catholic Church • Protestants considered the Catholic Church to be corrupt: abusing its power, etc. • Protestants believed the Catholic church encouraged idol worship. • “The kingdom of God is the kingdom of hearing,not of seeing” – Martin Luther

  21. Genre Painting • Peasant Wedding, Pieter Bruegel The Elder, oil on panel, 1568

  22. Genre Painting • The Hunters in the Snow, Pieter Bruegel The Elder, oil on panel, 1565

  23. Exercise: Compare these artworks Portrait of a Youth, Sandro Botticelli, 15th cent. (left) / Portrait of Margaret van Eyck, Jan van Eyck, oil, 15th cent. (right)

  24. Northern or Italian Renaissance?

  25. Exercise: Compare these artworks • Mid 13th century (left) / mid. 15th century, Fra Angelico’s Annunciation, San Marco, Florence (right)

  26. Exercise: Compare these artworks • Virgin & Child, Ravenna, 6century (left) / Madonna & Child, Rafael, early 16th century (right)

  27. Exercise: Compare these artworks • Madonna With Child, Pierodella Francesca, 15th century (left) / The Deposition from the Cross, Pontormo, 16th century (right)

More Related