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NOTES FOR TOPIC 9 Baroque The dominant style of European art from c. 1600 to c. 1720. The word probably derives from the Portuguese barroco, used to describe irregularly shaped pearls. Originally used as a pejorative (negative) term to characterize what was perceived to be the extravagant, unclassical, even grotesque nature of 17th-century architecture. Nowadays employed as a neutral term to designate the 17th- century style in general, but in popular usage can still mean ornate, ornamental, extravagant, overdone, etc.
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ADDITIONAL NOTES FOR TOPIC 9 By the end of the 16th century there was a widespread belief in Italy that art had grown old, that it was dying (or already dead) from “a certain I-don’t-know-what kind of malign influence, either of the sun, or the stars, or the moon, or of destiny or fortune.” There was also a nostalgic sense that what we now call the High Renaissance—the age of Leonardo, Michelangelo, and Raphael—was a Golden Age, and that the second half of the 16th century was “an age of senility,” or an “age of decrepitude,” characterized by a style that was “weak,” “sluggish,” “indolent,” and “washed-out.”
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ADDITIONAL NOTES FOR TOPIC 9 Protestant Reformation Martin Luther “95 Theses” (1517) Catholic Counter-Reformation Council of Trent (1545-63)
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MAPS OF ITALY IN THE 15TH & 16TH CENTURIES Note location of the town of Trent (called Trento in Italian and Trient in German)
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Rules governing art laid down at the Council of Trent: Clarity, simplicity, intelligibility Realistic interpretation of subject matter, which must be absolutely true to the Bible Emotional stimulus to piety
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Portrait of Caravaggio by Ottavio Leoni (chalk on blue paper) “Caravaggio’s style corresponded to his... appearance. He had a dark complexion and dark eyes, and his eyebrows and hair were black; this coloring was naturally reflected in his paintings.”—G. P. Bellori, 1672 Another 17th-century source described Caravaggio’s behavior as stravagantissimo—extremely bizarre or eccentric.
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Caravaggio, Supper at Emmaus, 1601
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Supper at Emmaus Detail: basket of fruit jutting out over the edge of the table into the “liminal” space—the space on the “threshold” of the real world.
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Another detail Supper at Emmaus
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One last detail Supper at Emmaus
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Caravaggio, Calling of St. Matthew, c. 1599-1600 View of the Contarelli Chapel, endowed by Matteo (Matthew) Contarelli
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Two of Matthew’s companions, one of whom listens to St. Peter Calling of St. Matthew
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St. Matthew pointing to... whom? Calling of St. Matthew
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Old man watching boy count money. But whose hands are counting the money?
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Caravaggio, David with the Head of Goliath, c. 1609
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Severed head of Goliath, oozing blood
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Self-portrait? Portrait of Caravaggio
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Gentileschi, Judith and Her Maidservant with the Head of Holofernes, c. 1625
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The painter’s full name was Artemisia Gentileschi, and she was the first woman artist to achieve international fame. Today she is a heroine of feminist art history. Since the mid-20 th century, she has been the subject of 2 scholarly books in English, 4 novels, 3 plays, and a movie! Approximately 90% of her surviving works feature women as the main protagonists.
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Zurbarán, St. Serapion, c. 1628 The Caravaggesque style arrives in Spain (Note the locations of Seville and Madrid) Map of Western Europe
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Francisco de Zurbarán, St. Serapion, c. 1628 Caravaggio, David with the Head of Goliath, c. 1609
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Diego Velázquez, The Water Carrier of Seville, c. 1619 Caravaggio, David with the Head of Goliath, c. 1609
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Diego Velázquez, The Water Carrier of Seville, c. 1619 Detail
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Velázquez, The Maids of Honor (Las Meninas), 1656
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Detail of Las Meninas
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Detail: The Infanta (Princess) Margarita Las Meninas
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Detail: one of the princess’s meninas
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Detail of hand and ribbon
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Detail: Self-portrait of Velázquez
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Reflection in the mirror: Queen Mariana and King Philip IV of Spain
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