350 likes | 1.25k Views
Effects of the Renaissance. Homework. Chapter 12 / 389-393 Take detailed reading notes Purpose for Reading: ID Causes and effects of the Protestant Reformation. View of Florence dominated by the Duomo Brunelleschi’s Dome. Michelangelo’s Square Copy of David.
E N D
Homework • Chapter 12 / 389-393 • Take detailed reading notes • Purpose for Reading: ID Causes and effects of the Protestant Reformation
Close up of Brunelleschi’s Dome 137 ft. wide 375 ft. high Duomo
Duomo Bell Tower
Three Hallmarks of the Renaissance • Humanism– focus on human potential & achievement; study of humans as opposed to God; allowed for earthly pleasures • Secularism– emphasis on the here & now rather than heaven; improve life on earth • Individualism– people should “be all that they could be”; sought fame, wealth, intelligence, & to be remembered forever
Gender Roles in the Renaissance • “Renaissance Man” – aman should be skilled in many different areas (writing, painting, well read, swordsman, rider) Baldassare Castiglione • Women – upper class were expected to become just as well educated, but not to do anything with talents; be interesting at parties & in social circles
Effects of the Renaissance • Critique of society led to the Reformation • Focus on learning led to the scientific revolution, which set the foundations of modern science • Principles and influence of arts in the Renaissance set the standard for Western art • Search for new ideas leading to exploration outside of Europe
Portrait Assignment: Due Thursday, 12-19-07 • Using pieces of construction paper, create a portrait of the person you researched that is an actual or symbolic representation. Use the following directions: • Use one solid piece of construction papers as the background • Do not waste - use scraps • Tear only - scissors are not allowed • Write the name of the person on the front • Include research on the back – where, when, what was accomplished, why the accomplishments are significant, and the hallmark of the Renaissance best represented
Raphael:415, 421,423 Jan van Eyck:416, 424 Lorenzo di Medici:418 Michelangelo:419, 420 Donatello:419 Masaccio:419 Sofonisba Anguissola:421 Dante:421 Petrach: 422 Machiavelli:422 Durer: 423-4 Holbein:424 Peter Bruegel (the Elder):425 Shakespeare: 425-426 15. Queen Elizabeth I: 426 16. Sandro Botticelli: 17. Edmund Spenser: 426 18. Ignatius of Loyola: 435 19. Fra Filipo Lippi: 420 20. Titian: 21. Savonarola: 428 22. Martin Luther 419 23. Giotto: 24. Brunelleschi: 25. Artemisia Gentileschi: 421 26. Boccoccio: 425 Henry VIII: 414 & 431 John Calvin: 433 Baldassare Castiglioni:422, & 420 Da Vinci: 421/423 Names