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Medieval Culture
Medieval Culture

... artists like Donatello, Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael (They were Renaissance artists before they were Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles!) developed these new techniques in paintings and sculptures that continue to influence art today. The Mona Lisa by Leonardo Da Vinci is one of the most recog ...
عمادة التعليم الإكتروني والتعلم عن بعد
عمادة التعليم الإكتروني والتعلم عن بعد

... Renaissance scholars and artists later sought to out-do their ancient predecessors, and therefore engaged in fresh intellectual and artistic exploration. ...
Part Two: Form 416 Cultural Contributions of the Renaissance
Part Two: Form 416 Cultural Contributions of the Renaissance

... In contrast to the rest of Europe, fourteenth-century Italy offered many new opportunities. Italy’s strategic location between East and West and its lucrative Eurasian trade spawned the growth of several thriving, wealthy, independent city-states. The city-state of Florence was at the forefront of t ...
Lecture 1
Lecture 1

... literature of[ the] late sixteenth ‫فيصل‬ and‫الملك‬ early Deanship of E-Learning and Distance Education ...
Renaissance
Renaissance

... a. In northern Europe, art and learning focused more on religion b. In northern Europe, the role of the church was important c. In northern Europe, the royal courts were the centers of Renaissance learning d. In the Italian peninsula, the role of the church was most important 13. Which is not a beli ...
“Florence is widely considered as the birthplace of the Renaissance
“Florence is widely considered as the birthplace of the Renaissance

... ‘... [He] used to make figures nine, ten, even twelve heads high, simply to increase their grace. He would say that the artist must have his measuring tools in the eye, rather than in the hand, as it is the eye that judges...’ (Hale 1969, p. 97) ...
Chapter 16: Renaissance
Chapter 16: Renaissance

... goddess of love and beauty) born from sea and is depicted on shell. Wind god Zephyr blow her toward shore where figure (Spring) awaits to cloth her. Modeled after Greek (Roman copy) Venus de Milo. In Neo-Platonic thought, Venus is associated with Mary. Birth of water relates to baptism of Christ by ...
Europe`s Transition from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance
Europe`s Transition from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance

... had been established after crusading Europeans made contact with the Mediterranean world. They studied Greek to access information that had been “lost”to western perspective for centuries. The most important was a work on education by a Roman scholar named Quintilian. He argued that the goal of educ ...
Chapter 12 - My Social Studies Teacher
Chapter 12 - My Social Studies Teacher

... Civic humanism: an intellectual movement of the Italian Renaissance that saw Cicero, who was both an intellectual and a statesman, as the ideal and held that humanists should be involved in government and use their rhetorical training in the service of the state. Condottieri: leaders of bands of mer ...
Renaissance Art - MisterWoodyNotebook
Renaissance Art - MisterWoodyNotebook

... Influence of Humanist ideas Worked with Brunelleschi Applied for contract to create the 2nd and 3rd sets of Baptistry doors for the church of Santa Maria del Fiore ...
Note Taking Study Guide
Note Taking Study Guide

... 1455, Johann Gutenberg printed the first complete edition of the Bible using the new printing press. The printing press caused a printing revolution. Before, books were made by hand. They were rare and expensive. Printed books were cheaper and easier to produce. Now more books were available, so mor ...
The Renaissance: Context and Concepts
The Renaissance: Context and Concepts

... at a late medieval time, this doesn’t mean if you move to a different cultural context such as the Mediterranean that this also late medieval. ...
0495799866_210415 - The Unstandardized Standard
0495799866_210415 - The Unstandardized Standard

... Another type of portrait which the15th century Italian artists explored was the large group portrait, which presented the family as a dynasty. For example, the entire family of the Duke of Mantua was painted by Mantegna in the famous frescoes for the Camera degli Sposi 1474 (Room of the Newlyweds) o ...
Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance
Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance

... this context, it refers to a revival of art and learning. The educated men and women of Italy hoped to bring back to life the culture of classical Greece and Rome. Yet in striving to revive the past, the people of the Renaissance created something new. The contributions made during this period led t ...
Presentation
Presentation

... this context, it refers to a revival of art and learning. The educated men and women of Italy hoped to bring back to life the culture of classical Greece and Rome. Yet in striving to revive the past, the people of the Renaissance created something new. The contributions made during this period led t ...
Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance
Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance

... this context, it refers to a revival of art and learning. The educated men and women of Italy hoped to bring back to life the culture of classical Greece and Rome. Yet in striving to revive the past, the people of the Renaissance created something new. The contributions made during this period led t ...
Renaissance
Renaissance

... ambassador is peace” and “The first duty of an ambassador is exactly the same as that of any other servant of a government, that is, to do, say, advise, and think whatever my best serve the preservation and aggrandizement of his own state.” e. Italy will be one of the last nationalities to unify (18 ...
Ren Art and Video stuff - New Paltz Central School District
Ren Art and Video stuff - New Paltz Central School District

... lacked emotion and human interaction. He brought a naturalism to his work. This is visible in his painting Meeting At the Golden Gate where a couple is shown in an affectionate embrace. He also used landscape to intensify his paintings and bring more attention to the figures he painted. Giotto's mos ...
Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance
Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance

... this context, it refers to a revival of art and learning. The educated men and women of Italy hoped to bring back to life the culture of classical Greece and Rome. Yet in striving to revive the past, the people of the Renaissance created something new. The contributions made during this period led t ...
Renaissance PPT
Renaissance PPT

... Politically unstable ...
Leonardo`s Virgin of the Rocks Article
Leonardo`s Virgin of the Rocks Article

... This is the first time that an Italian Renaissance artist has completely abandoned halos. We saw how Fra Filippo Lippi reduced the halo to a narrow ring around Mary's head. Clearly the unreal, symbolic nature of the halo was antithetical to the realism of the Renaissance. It was, in a way, a necessa ...
Art Instructions
Art Instructions

... Foreshortening is distorting a picture to make it look 3-D, and perspective is similar to that but in “special relationships”. As other Renaissance painter did, he painted frescoes, and one of his most acclaimed pieces was the Martyrdom of St. Sebastian that is now currently in the Milan gallery cal ...
Renaissance
Renaissance

... 1. Look at the graphic to help organize your thoughts. Record the main ideas from the section about the Italian Renaissance. Renaissance I. Italy’s advantages ...
Ch 17 Renaissance and Reformation
Ch 17 Renaissance and Reformation

... 1. Look at the graphic to help organize your thoughts. Record the main ideas from the section about the Italian Renaissance. Renaissance I. Italy’s advantages ...
The Annunciation and Two Saints
The Annunciation and Two Saints

... The printing press was “an instrument for intellectual deliberation and the dissemination of ideas” (Pasinetti and James 2466). It “transformed the reading habits of Europeans and enabled them not only to publish but to own materials once restricted to clerics and the wealthy” (Damrosch 157). Spurri ...
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Renaissance music



Renaissance music is music written in Europe during the Renaissance. Consensus among music historians – with notable dissent – has been to start the era around 1400, with the end of the medieval era, and to close it around 1600, with the beginning of the Baroque period, therefore commencing the musical Renaissance about a hundred years after the beginning of the Renaissance as understood in other disciplines. As in the other arts, the music of the period was significantly influenced by the developments which define the Early Modern period: the rise of humanistic thought; the recovery of the literary and artistic heritage of ancient Greece and Rome; increased innovation and discovery; the growth of commercial enterprise; the rise of a bourgeois class; and the Protestant Reformation. From this changing society emerged a common, unifying musical language, in particular the polyphonic style of the Franco-Flemish school.The invention of the Gutenberg press made distribution of music and musical theory possible on a wide scale. Demand for music as entertainment and as an activity for educated amateurs increased with the emergence of a bourgeois class. Dissemination of chansons, motets, and masses throughout Europe coincided with the unification of polyphonic practice into the fluid style which culminated in the second half of the sixteenth century in the work of composers such as Palestrina, Lassus, Victoria and William Byrd. Relative political stability and prosperity in the Low Countries, along with a flourishing system of music education in the area's many churches and cathedrals, allowed the training of hundreds of singers and composers. These musicians were highly sought throughout Europe, particularly in Italy, where churches and aristocratic courts hired them as composers and teachers. By the end of the 16th century, Italy had absorbed the northern influences, with Venice, Rome, and other cities being centers of musical activity, reversing the situation from a hundred years earlier. Opera arose at this time in Florence as a deliberate attempt to resurrect the music of ancient Greece (OED 2005).Music, increasingly freed from medieval constraints, in range, rhythm, harmony, form, and notation, became a vehicle for new personal expression. Composers found ways to make music expressive of the texts they were setting. Secular music absorbed techniques from sacred music, and vice versa. Popular secular forms such as the chanson and madrigal spread throughout Europe. Courts employed virtuoso performers, both singers and instrumentalists. Music also became more self-sufficient with its availability in printed form, existing for its own sake. Many familiar modern instruments (including the violin, guitar, lute and keyboard instruments), developed into new forms during the Renaissance responding to the evolution of musical ideas, presenting further possibilities for composers and musicians to explore. Modern woodwind and brass instruments like the bassoon and trombone also appeared; extending the range of sonic color and power. During the 15th century the sound of full triads became common, and towards the end of the 16th century the system of church modes began to break down entirely, giving way to the functional tonality which was to dominate western art music for the next three centuries.From the Renaissance era both secular and sacred music survives in quantity, and both vocal and instrumental. An enormous diversity of musical styles and genres flourished during the Renaissance, and can be heard on commercial recordings in the 21st century, including masses, motets, madrigals, chansons, accompanied songs, instrumental dances, and many others. Numerous early music ensembles specializing in music of the period give concert tours and make recordings, using a wide range of interpretive styles.
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