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Leonardo da Vinci
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Vitruvian Man, Leonardo da Vinci
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Plato believed the circle was the perfect geometric form, associating it with divinity. Illustrates the observation made by Vitruvius that, when a man extends his 4 limbs so that hands and feet touch the circumference of the circle, his navel will correspond to the center of the circle.
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Embryo in the womb, Leonardo da Vinci
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The Last Supper, Leonardo da Vinci, oil and tempera on plaster, 1498
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Oil and tempera-deterioration. 3 windows Christ is the “light of the world” Mathematically precise use of linear perspective
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Grouping of the twelve apostles Jesus forms a triangle as he extends his arms forward Importance of the pyramid Judas falls back, clutching his bag of coins
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Cartoons Full scale drawing of future painting. Cartoons are drawn on regular paper with a dry medium Final rendition of the composition, light, shadow, details of the future painting Perforation around forms to transfer
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Virgin and Child with St. Anne and St. John the Baptist, Leonardo da Vinci charcoal with white on brown paper, 1505-1507 Example of Cartoon
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Mona Lisa, Leonardo da Vinci, oil on wood, c. 1503-1506
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Took 3 years to complete Pyramidal composition ¾ view Atmospheric perspective in background
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Rocky background is imaginary and mysterious- no crisp areas- (sfumato) Psychological intensity, enigmatic smile expresses the character of the sitter Background pattern repeated in drapery
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Bramante
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Bramante’s plan for St. Peter’s
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Pope Julius II’s decision Greek cross Emulate EC central plan tombs
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Tempietto, Church of San Pietro in Montorio, Bramante, 1502-10
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Martyrium-building that commemorates place where saint was crucified Saint Peter’s crucifixion site Commissioned by King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain Circular shrine similar to Greek tholos tombs
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Peristyle structure with cylindrical cella topped by dome Bramante believed in the circle as the perfect form
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Michelangelo
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Pieta, Michelangelo, marble, 1500
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Michelangelo’s first masterpiece-23 yrs old Originally intended as a funerary monument Christ and the Virgin in a pyramidal arrangement, little negative space; compact. Classic composure of the Virgin’s face reflects the calm idealized expressions of Greek sculpture.
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Portrays strength of a mother’s love-size difference-Jesus weightless Age Changes context to more humanist than religious Only work he ever signed
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David, Michelangelo, 1501-1504, marble
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17’ high from one block of marble Worked on previously M commissioned to make sculpture for the east roofline of FC 3yrs, 6 tons later-no way
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David-hero symbolic of Florence- embraced by them Smaller city state surrounded by more powerful rival states High Classical Greek stance/expression Hellenistic proportion
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Sistine Chapel Ceiling Vatican, Rome, 1508-1512 End wall, 1536-1541
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Sistine Chapel erected in 1472, painted by many masters of 15 th c. Function of Chapel-where new popes are elected Complicated arrangement of Old Testament figures and first few chapters of Genesis
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131’ x 43’ 5,000 sq. feet of fresco Curved surfaces seen 60’ below Mold, damp weather, scaffolding
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The Creation of Adam, Sistine Chapel, Michelangelo, ceiling fresco, 1512
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God flying through sky, Adam bound to earth God makes Adam in his likeness Brain? Pre-birth? Sculptural quality Greek influence
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Michelangelo Last Judgment, end wall of Sistine Chapel 1534-41
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One large space on wall (not ceiling) behind altar Mannerism influence-distortion, elongation, crowded Four horizontal registers: –Hell –Ascending and descending –Rising to heaven –Angels carrying cross
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Capitoline Hill, Michelangelo, 1538-64
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-the first great civic center aka Campidoglio -The hill had been the symbolic heart of ancient Rome, and the pope wanted to restore it to its ancient grandeur. -Two existing buildings already abutted each other at an awkward 80 degree angle. He added another building at the same angle to flank the central Palace of Senators.
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redesigned the façade of the lateral buildings so they would be identical and left the fourth side open, with a panoramic view of the Vatican. –Trapezoidal plan Unifying the whole was a statue of Marcus Aurelius on a patterned oval pavement. measure and proportions “kept in the eyes.”
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Michelangelo, St. Peter’s, 1546- 64
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Michelangelo’s plan for St. Peter’s
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Became the official architect well into construction Respected Bramante’s Greek Cross design Designed round dome like Pantheon but died before it could be complete Changed shape after his death-Giacomo della Porta completed dome
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Alternate window designs Double dome-Brunelleschi influence
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