Art and Patronage Italians were willing to spend a lot of money on art. / Art communicated social, political, and spiritual values. / Italian banking.

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Art and Patronage Italians were willing to spend a lot of money on art. / Art communicated social, political, and spiritual values. / Italian banking.
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Presentation transcript:

Art and Patronage Italians were willing to spend a lot of money on art. / Art communicated social, political, and spiritual values. / Italian banking & international trade interests had the money. Public art in Florence was organized and supported by guilds. Therefore, the consumption of art was used as a form of competition for social & political status!

1. Oil on Stretched Canvas The use of oil paint (minerals mixed with turentine and oil) provided a greater range of rich colors that permitted painters to represent textures and 3-D form.

2. Perspective First use of linear perspective! The Trinity Masaccio 1427 What you are, I once was; what I am, you will become. Optical effect of objects receding in the distance through lines that appear to converge at a single point in the picture: “vanishing point” Artists also reduced the size of objects, muted colors, or blurred details as objects got further away.

3. The use of Light and Shadow Chiaroscuro Chiaroscuro is a painting technique in which lighter parts seem to emerge from darker areas, producing the illusion of rounded, sculptural relief on a flat surface

Chiaroscuro (The walls are flat)

4. Geometrical Arrangement of Figures Figures are grouped in a “pyramid configuration” creating a symmetrical composition where the focal point is at the apex.

5. Realism & Expression

6. Classicism Greco-Roman influence. Secularism. Humanism. Individualism  free standing figures. Symmetry/Balance

7. Emphasis on Individualism Batista Sforza & Federico de Montefeltre: The Duke & Dutchess of Urbino Piero della Francesca,

Lorenzo the Magnificent Cosimo de Medici

Filippo Brunelleschi Architect Cuppolo of St. Maria del Fiore

Filippo Brunelleschi Commissioned to build the cathedral dome. / Used unique architectural concepts.  He studied the ancient Pantheon in Rome.  Used ribs for support.

Brunelleschi’s Dome

Supporting the Duomo Walls

Brunelleschi’s Dome

The Dome from the inside

Other Famous Domes Il Duomo St. Peter’s St. Paul’s US capital (Florence) (Rome) (London) (Washington)