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Medieval Art No dimensions instead flat surfaces Children look like adults Focus is on religious topics Disproportional (unbalanced)

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Presentation on theme: "Medieval Art No dimensions instead flat surfaces Children look like adults Focus is on religious topics Disproportional (unbalanced)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Medieval Art No dimensions instead flat surfaces Children look like adults Focus is on religious topics Disproportional (unbalanced)

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5 Renaissance Art Proportionate Still religious, but rich people often paid to be in the painting Secular subjects = non religious Emphasis on the human body Classic subjects

6 How does the Renaissance depiction of the Virgin Mary and Baby Jesus differ from the Medieval depiction? RenaissanceMiddle Ages

7 What Differences Did You Notice?  Jesus really looks like a baby  Proportionate to Mary  Mary looks human, not like an angel

8 Which is Which? Medieval or Renaissance? A. B.

9 C.D.

10 E. F.

11 Renaissance 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!

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13 1. Realism & Expression Expulsion from the Garden by Masaccio 1427 First nudes since classical times.

14 2. Perspective Perspective! Perspective! Perspective! Perspective! Perspective! First use of linear perspective! Perspective! Perspective! The Trinity by Masaccio 1427

15 Perspective

16 3. Classicism  Greco-Roman influence.  Secularism: worldly, not religious.  Humanism.  Individualism  free standing figures.  Symmetry/Balance The “Classical Pose” Medici “Venus” (1c)

17 4. Emphasis on Individualism Batista Sforza & Federico de Montefeltre: The Duke & Dutchess of Urbino Piero della Francesca, 1465-1466.

18 5. Geometrical Arrangement of Figures The Dreyfus Madonna with the Pomegranate  by Leonardo da Vinci  1469  The figure as architecture!

19 6. Light & Shadowing/Softening Edges Strongcontrastsbetween light and dark Shadingorblending so there are no sharpoutlines

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21 Lorenzo the Magnificent 1478 - 1521 Cosimo de Medici 1517 - 1574

22 Florence Under the Medici Family Medici Chapel Medici Chapel The Medici Palace

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

24 Brunelleschi’s Dome

25 Comparing Domes

26 Other Famous Domes Il Duomo St. Peter’s St. Paul’s U.S. capital (Florence) (Rome) (London) (Washington D.C.)

27 The Ideal City Piero della Francesca, 1470

28 David by Donatello 1430 First free-form bronze statue since Roman times! The Liberation of Sculpture

29 David by Verrocchio 1473 – 1475 David by Verrocchio 1473 – 1475 (One of his students was Leonardo da Vinci)

30 The Baptism of Christ Verrocchio, 1472 - 1475 The Baptism of Christ Verrocchio, 1472 - 1475 Leonardo da Vinci

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32 Vitruvian Man Leonardo da Vinci 1492 Blends science and art The L’uomo universale (Universal Man)

33 The Renaissance “Man” Has broad knowledge about many things in different fields. Deep knowledge/skill in one area. Able to link information from different areas/disciplines and create new knowledge. The Greek ideal of the “well-rounded man” was at the heart of Renaissance education.

34 Self-Portrait – da Vinci, 1512 1452 - 1519 Artist Sculptor Architect Scientist Engineer Inventor

35 Leonardo, the Artist The Virgin of the Rocks Leonardo da Vinci 1483-1486

36 Leonardo da Vinci Born in 1452 Painter, sculptor, inventor, botanist, musician, architect Dissected the human body to see how muscles and tendons worked Sketched submarines and airplane models before they were even invented

37 Leonardo, the Artist: From his Notebooks of over 5000 pages (1508-1519)

38 Mona Lisa da Vinci, 1503-4  Her identity was determined in 2005: Lisa del Giocondo, wife of a wealthy Florentine merchant.  Her enigmatic (mysterious) smile continues to puzzle onlookers.  It currently hangs in the Louvre Museum in Paris.

39 Mona Lisa OR da Vinci??

40 It is displayed in a purpose-built, climate-controlled enclosure behind bulletproof glass. * About 6 million people view the painting at the Louvre each year.

41 Renaissance Humor

42 The Last Supper - da Vinci, 1498 & Geometry

43 horizontal vertical Perspective! The Last Supper - da Vinci, 1498

44 Detail of Jesus The Last Supper Leonardo da Vinci 1498 Deterioration

45 A Da Vinci “Code”: St. John or Mary Magdalene?

46 Leonardo, the Sculptor An Equestrian Statue 1516-1518

47 Leonardo, the Architect: Pages from his Notebook Study of a central church. 1488

48 Leonardo, the Architect: Pages from his Notebook Plan of the city of Imola, 1502.

49 Leonardo, the Scientist (Biology): Pages from his Notebook An example of the humanist desire to unlock the secrets of nature.

50 Leonardo, the Scientist (Anatomy): Pages from his Notebook

51 Leonardo, the Inventor: Pages from his Notebook

52 A study of siege defenses. Studies of water-lifting devices. Leonardo, the Engineer: Pages from his Notebook

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54 Michelangelo Buonorrati 1475 – 1564 He represented the body in three dimensions of sculpture.

55 Michelangelo Sculptor, engineer, painter, architect, poet, architect Designed the dome for St. Peter’s Cathedral in Rome which served as a model when architects were designing the U.S. Capitol building Greatest achievement was his four year ordeal painting the Sistine Chapel in Rome

56 David Michelangelo Buonarotti 1504 Marble Depicts a young King David before he challenges Goliath

57  15c 16c  What a difference a century makes!

58 The Pieta  Michelangelo Buonarroti  1499  Marble The Popes as Patrons of the Arts

59 The Sistine Chapel Michelangelo Buonarroti 1508 - 1512

60 The Sistine Chapel’s Ceiling Michelangelo Buonarroti 1508 - 1512

61 The Sistine Chapel: Details The Creation of the Heavens

62 The Sistine Chapel: Details Creation of Man (God giving life to Adam)

63 The Sistine Chapel: Details The Fall from Grace

64 The Sistine Chapel: Details The Last Judgment

65 Raffaello Sanzio (1483-1520) Self-Portrait, 1506 Portrait of the Artist with a Friend, 1518

66 Baldassare Castiglione by Raphael, 1514-1515 Castiglione represented the humanist “gentleman” as a man of refinement and self-control.

67 Perspective!Perspective! Betrothal of the Virgin Raphael1504

68 Raphael’s Canagiani Madonna, 1507

69 Raphael’s Madonnas (1) Sistine Madonna Cowpepper Madonna

70 Madonna della Sedia Alba Madonna Raphael’s Madonnas (2)

71 The School of Athens – Raphael, 1510 -11 One point perspective. All of the important Greek philosophers and thinkers are included  all of the great personalities of the Seven Liberal Arts! A great variety of poses. Located in the papal apartments’ library. Raphael worked on this commission simultaneously as Michelangelo was doing the Sistine Chapel. No Christian themes here.

72 The School of Athens – Raphael, 1510 -11 Raphael Da Vinci Michelangelo

73 Aristotle: looks to this earth [the here and now]. Plato: looks to the heavens [or the IDEAL realm]. The School of Athens – Raphael

74 Averroes Hypatia Pythagoras

75 Zoroaster Ptolemy Euclid


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