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Renaissance Art: The Italians. Characteristics of Renaissance Art. Realism Three-dimensional Balanced and ordered Portraits Landscapes and attention to depictions of nature Classical style Depiction of classical themes and stories. Renaissance Art (cont.).
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Characteristics of Renaissance Art Realism Three-dimensional Balanced and ordered Portraits Landscapes and attention to depictions of nature Classical style Depiction of classical themes and stories
Renaissance Art (cont.) • led to many changes in both the technical aspects of painting and sculpture, as well as to their subject matter • new techniques in the manipulation of light and darkness, • (see tone contrast evident in many of Titian’s portraits) & development of sfumato* and chiaroscuro by da Vinci • mostly made for commissions or religious reasons • Sfumato: subtle gradation of tone which was used to obscure sharp edges, eg, da Vinci’s Monalisa From http://painting.about.com/od/oldmastertechniques/a/sfmuato_chiaros.htm
Renaissance Art (cont.) • Significant change: the artist came to occupy a different place in society- art was becoming more than just a craft. • Renaissance society was dominated by guilds, which represented the important trades in the city. • All were connected to a patron saint & each looked out for their fellow members, ensuring that all had employment & a decent wage. • Workshops –abundant: a master paid to take on an apprentice to teach practical skills in the field.
Sculptors, too, began to rediscover many ancient techniques such as contrapposto. (counterpose: It is used in the visual arts to describe a human figure standing with most of its weight on one foot so that its shoulders and arms twist off-axis from the hips and legs. This gives the figure a more dynamic, or alternatively relaxed appearance) Donatello’s sculptures of David
Following with the humanist spirit of the age, art became more secular in subject matter, depicting ancient mythology & Christian themes. This genre of art is often referred to as Renaissance Classicism. • In the North: the most important Renaissance innovation was the widespread use of oil paints-greater colour & intensity.
In 1290 Giotto began painting in a manner that was less traditional & more based upon observation of nature. • His fresco cycle at the Scrovegni Chapel, Padua is seen as the beginnings of a Renaissance style.
Cappella Scrovegni (Arena Chapel), Padua The Cappella Scrovegni was dedicated to Santa Maria della Carità at the Feast of the Annunciation, 1305. Giotto's fresco cycle focuses on the life of the Virgin & celebrates her role in human salvation.
Giotto’s angel began to show a greater sense of real space and form
Early Renaissance Below: Donatello’s classical techniques such as contrapposto Above: Classical subjects like the unsupported nude — his second sculpture of David
High Renaissance • Sculptor & architect Brunelleschi studied the architectural ideas of ancient Roman buildings for inspiration. Giotto & Ghiberti contributed works of art in the Florence cathedral. • Masaccio perfected certain elements [composition, individual expression, & human form] to paint frescoes [Brancacci Chapel]
High Renaissance • High Renaissance artists: Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo Buonarroti, Titian & Raffaello Sanzio. • The 15th-century artistic developments in Italy (interest in systems of perspectives, in depicting anatomy, & in classical cultures) developed during the 16th Century • The art of those most closely associated with this period: mastery of technique & aesthetics. • Artists created works of authority which later generations of artists used as models for instruction. • These works of art further raised the prestige of artists. Above: Angel (fragment of the Baronci Altarpiece) Right: Raffaello(1483 - 1520) Portrait of Bindo Altoviti Oil on wood, 1512-1515 National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., USA
High Renaissance • Artists could claim divine inspiration, thereby raising visual art to a status formerly given only to poetry. • Painters, sculptors, & architects successfully claimed for their work a high position among the fine arts. • In a way, 16th- century masters created a new profession with its own rights of expression & its own respected character.
Masaccio. Tribute Money Brancacci Chapel, Church of Santa Maria del Carmine, Florence 1427 • impt. roles played by: atmospheric perspective, spaciousness & depth of landscape, combined light source • interweaving of arms: we follow Peter through space • artist used oppositional colours & deeply formed drapery to symbolise light & shade. • narrative told through: lines, perspective, gestures of figures & facial expressions
Masaccio. Tribute Money .Brancacci Chapel, Church of Santa Maria del Carmine,Florence 1427
Giotto. Homage of a Simple Man. Detail. 1295-1300. Fresco. St. Francis, Upper Church, Assisi, Italy. Note: he began to show a greater sense of real space & form, although he had not yet understood the idea of perspective
Religion remained a major focal point of Renaissance art -The Sistine Chapel-Michelangelo
Individualism –Portraits -portraits celebrated the unique qualities and personality of the individual person (two examples by Leonardo da Vinci)
Sandro Botticellior Il Botticello "little barrels"; 1445 -1510 • Primavera 1478
Raffaello: L'escola d'Atenes Apollo Plato Aristotle Athena Ptolemy Pythagoras Euclid Michelangelo
The building is a modification of *Bramante's first design for St Peter's. • Plato and Aristotle as central figures walking in a wandering manner through the Lyceum*. A one-point (linear) perspective is used , one method to show 3-D objects on a 2-D surface. • *Bramante: • *Lyceum: building for public events
Lines which appear to go away from the viewer meet at a single point on the horizon, the so called vanishing point. The perspective is such that this point is between Plato and Aristotle stressing the importance of these two persons.
To an almost equal distance between Plato and Aristotle we have Euclid (23) and Pythagoras (30). • A transition from Philosophy to pure Science (from left to right) that also is represented by Apollo and Athena sculptures on the left and right side.
Many figures (all except Socrates?) were drawn according to persons of Raphael's epoch such as Plato whose face is that of Leonardo. There is also, although not perfect or proportional, some temporal ordering of the persons from the centre.
VeronesePaolo Caliari 1528-88. : Feast in the House of Levi1573His penchant was for feast scenes from the Bible.
Veronese (continued) • His painting for the Basilica di Santi Giovanni e Paolo, The Last Supper, contained not only the Biblical scene, but exotic dwarves, soldiers, & an array of animals. • Typical of narrative quality assoc. with his paintings. • The work was completed in 1573. However the Inquisition summoned him to explain the inclusion of exotic items within the context of a religious picture. • His solution: renamed the painting as TheFeast in the Houseof Levi.
Sofonisba Anguissola (1532-1625) was one of the most famous female painters • Three Sisters Playing Chess. • Oil on canvas, 1555 • Painted when she was only 20 years old
Phillip II of Spain, originally attributed to Sanchez Colo,a fellow court painter, but attributed to Sofonisba Anguissola in 1996. She portrays a sombre Phillip II fingering his Order of the Golden Fleece & dressed in the high hat and black clothing that typified his midlife.
Titian. Man with a Glove, c. 1519. Oil on canvas, Louvre, Paris.
Doge of Venice 1474 Gentile Bellini