The Last Supper
... • The Crusades brought Europeans in contact with Byzantium, whose scholars had preserved Greek and Roman learning • Increased trade with Asia and Africa brought Europeans in contact with Arab and African achievements ...
... • The Crusades brought Europeans in contact with Byzantium, whose scholars had preserved Greek and Roman learning • Increased trade with Asia and Africa brought Europeans in contact with Arab and African achievements ...
The Italian Renaissance
... • Renaissance – “rebirth” –Renewed interest in Greek and Roman styles and methods in the Humanities study human culture, includes ancient & modern languages, literature, philosophy, religion, visual and performing arts, music, theater, social sciences like history, anthropology, cultural studies, la ...
... • Renaissance – “rebirth” –Renewed interest in Greek and Roman styles and methods in the Humanities study human culture, includes ancient & modern languages, literature, philosophy, religion, visual and performing arts, music, theater, social sciences like history, anthropology, cultural studies, la ...
File - Mr Wyka`s Weebly
... Italian Renaissance Art • Renaissance artists sought to imitate nature. • Giovanni – the first Renaissance master. – Called Masaccio – Painted frescoes. A fresco is a painting done on fresh, wet plaster with water based paints. – It is extremely difficult as the artist must complete his painting be ...
... Italian Renaissance Art • Renaissance artists sought to imitate nature. • Giovanni – the first Renaissance master. – Called Masaccio – Painted frescoes. A fresco is a painting done on fresh, wet plaster with water based paints. – It is extremely difficult as the artist must complete his painting be ...
Renaissance and Reformation Chapter 15 Section 1
... is still greatly admired. During this period, wealthy people became patrons of the arts and used art as status symbols. In Florence, the ruling Medici family and especially Lorenzo de Medici gave artists, intellectuals, and musicians huge sums of money for their works. Leonardo da Vinci achieved gre ...
... is still greatly admired. During this period, wealthy people became patrons of the arts and used art as status symbols. In Florence, the ruling Medici family and especially Lorenzo de Medici gave artists, intellectuals, and musicians huge sums of money for their works. Leonardo da Vinci achieved gre ...
The Renaissance - Travel History
... Tiziano Vecelli or Vecellio, commonly known as Titian, was one of the greatest 16th century Renaissance painters of Venice, Italy ...
... Tiziano Vecelli or Vecellio, commonly known as Titian, was one of the greatest 16th century Renaissance painters of Venice, Italy ...
The Renaissance - Blue Valley Schools
... = the native language) instead of classical Latin. • Machiavelli- wrote The Prince a handbook for behavior. ...
... = the native language) instead of classical Latin. • Machiavelli- wrote The Prince a handbook for behavior. ...
Renaissance
... on city—if it dies, so do you • Patronage: wealthy sponsored art to demonstrate importance & glorify city ...
... on city—if it dies, so do you • Patronage: wealthy sponsored art to demonstrate importance & glorify city ...
The Renaissance - GS Lakie Middle School
... • A ruler should be quick and decisive in decision making • A ruler keeps power by any means necessary • The end justifies the means • Be good when possible, and evil when necessary ...
... • A ruler should be quick and decisive in decision making • A ruler keeps power by any means necessary • The end justifies the means • Be good when possible, and evil when necessary ...
The Renaissance
... • A ruler should be quick and decisive in decision making • A ruler keeps power by any means necessary • The end justifies the means • Be good when possible, and evil when necessary ...
... • A ruler should be quick and decisive in decision making • A ruler keeps power by any means necessary • The end justifies the means • Be good when possible, and evil when necessary ...
Middle Ages Stations and Questions
... returned to Africa laden with spoils. Later that same year, Tarik took an army of 7000 Africans, crossing from Africa to Gilbraltar (named after him), defeating King Roderic and conquering most of the Iberian Peninsula. Thus began the Moorish domination of Spain, which was not fully ended until 1492 ...
... returned to Africa laden with spoils. Later that same year, Tarik took an army of 7000 Africans, crossing from Africa to Gilbraltar (named after him), defeating King Roderic and conquering most of the Iberian Peninsula. Thus began the Moorish domination of Spain, which was not fully ended until 1492 ...
The Renaissance - Barren County Schools
... time, their fame approached only by Michelangelo's Creation of Adam. Leonardo's drawing of the Vitruvian Man is also iconic. Perhaps fifteen of his paintings survive, the small number due to his constant, and frequently disastrous, experimentation with new techniques, and his chronic procrastination ...
... time, their fame approached only by Michelangelo's Creation of Adam. Leonardo's drawing of the Vitruvian Man is also iconic. Perhaps fifteen of his paintings survive, the small number due to his constant, and frequently disastrous, experimentation with new techniques, and his chronic procrastination ...
WHII Renaissance Introduction M Lynde
... Italians became interested in humanism, the concern with human values in this life as opposed to religious beliefs and the afterlife. Renaissance architecture abandoned the church’s Gothic style and adopted the simplicity and balance of more classical forms. Artists including Michelangelo and Da Vin ...
... Italians became interested in humanism, the concern with human values in this life as opposed to religious beliefs and the afterlife. Renaissance architecture abandoned the church’s Gothic style and adopted the simplicity and balance of more classical forms. Artists including Michelangelo and Da Vin ...
art wkst 2
... shows clearly the different feelings of Jesus and his of the first to paint in this new style. Giotto lived followers. more than a century before the beginning of the Michelangelo Buonarroti of Florence was one Renaissance, but his paintings show real emotion. of the greatest artists of all time. Li ...
... shows clearly the different feelings of Jesus and his of the first to paint in this new style. Giotto lived followers. more than a century before the beginning of the Michelangelo Buonarroti of Florence was one Renaissance, but his paintings show real emotion. of the greatest artists of all time. Li ...
Renaissance Notes for kids Part 1
... 3. Machiavellian advice seemed to encourage _________ treatment of citizens, rival _________. 4. Advises rulers to separate __________ from politics; theory that “the ________ justifies the __________” deviated from accepted views of correct behavior 5. Idea that ________ an entity in itself, separa ...
... 3. Machiavellian advice seemed to encourage _________ treatment of citizens, rival _________. 4. Advises rulers to separate __________ from politics; theory that “the ________ justifies the __________” deviated from accepted views of correct behavior 5. Idea that ________ an entity in itself, separa ...
The Renaissance notes
... One of the big changes in the Renaissance was in the basic way people thought about things. In the Middle Ages people thought that life was supposed to be hard. They grew up thinking that life was nothing but hard work and war. However, around the 1300s, the people in Florence, Italy began to think ...
... One of the big changes in the Renaissance was in the basic way people thought about things. In the Middle Ages people thought that life was supposed to be hard. They grew up thinking that life was nothing but hard work and war. However, around the 1300s, the people in Florence, Italy began to think ...
The Renaissance and Exploration - Reeths
... • Columbus convinced Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain to sponsor his quest across the Atlantic to reach India • he estimated this would only be 2,000 miles • Thought the world was round, wanted to reach Japan too • Nina, Pinta and Sana Maria were names of ships • Landed in the Bahamas, did ...
... • Columbus convinced Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain to sponsor his quest across the Atlantic to reach India • he estimated this would only be 2,000 miles • Thought the world was round, wanted to reach Japan too • Nina, Pinta and Sana Maria were names of ships • Landed in the Bahamas, did ...
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 ...
... 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 ...
Italian Renaissance
... Naples in southern Italy. • The Spanish replied to the Italian cries of assistance and engaged the French in a 30year war on the Apennine Peninsula. • The turning point of the war came in 1527 when soldiers and mercenaries of Spain’s King Charles I, who had not been paid in months, sacked Rome. • Sp ...
... Naples in southern Italy. • The Spanish replied to the Italian cries of assistance and engaged the French in a 30year war on the Apennine Peninsula. • The turning point of the war came in 1527 when soldiers and mercenaries of Spain’s King Charles I, who had not been paid in months, sacked Rome. • Sp ...
Lecture 3 Birth of the Renaissance and the Italian City States
... 2. Peasantry was largely illiterate and Renaissance ideas had little impact on common people. 3. Working classes and small merchants were far too preoccupied with the concerns of daily life ...
... 2. Peasantry was largely illiterate and Renaissance ideas had little impact on common people. 3. Working classes and small merchants were far too preoccupied with the concerns of daily life ...
Pittsburgh version
... 14. Read the passage - 'Christopher Columbus Quote 2' - and answer the question below: ...
... 14. Read the passage - 'Christopher Columbus Quote 2' - and answer the question below: ...
Art of the Renaissance During the Renaissance many artists created
... Art of the Renaissance During the Renaissance many artists created amazing works of art. There were many innovations in technique which brought more realism to paintings. The ideals of humanism, individualism, secularism, and classicism were reflected in many pieces of art. Religious themes had domi ...
... Art of the Renaissance During the Renaissance many artists created amazing works of art. There were many innovations in technique which brought more realism to paintings. The ideals of humanism, individualism, secularism, and classicism were reflected in many pieces of art. Religious themes had domi ...
The Renaissance
... as Greek temple architecture (with triangular pediments), Greek columns, Roman arches and domes (e.g. the Pantheon in Rome) Simplicity, symmetry and balance. Contrasted sharply with the highlyornamented gothic style of the middle ages of pointed arches (as evidenced in numerous ...
... as Greek temple architecture (with triangular pediments), Greek columns, Roman arches and domes (e.g. the Pantheon in Rome) Simplicity, symmetry and balance. Contrasted sharply with the highlyornamented gothic style of the middle ages of pointed arches (as evidenced in numerous ...
Spanish Golden Age
The Spanish Golden Age (Spanish: Siglo de Oro, Golden Century) is a period of flourishing in arts and literature in Spain, coinciding with the political rise and decline of the Spanish Habsburg dynasty. El Siglo de Oro does not imply precise dates and is usually considered to have lasted longer than an actual century. It begins no earlier than 1492, with the end of the Reconquista (Reconquest), the sea voyages of Christopher Columbus to the New World, and the publication of Antonio de Nebrija's Gramática de la lengua castellana (Grammar of the Castilian Language). Politically, it ends no later than 1659, with the Treaty of the Pyrenees, ratified between France and Habsburg Spain. The last great writer of the period, Pedro Calderón de la Barca, died in 1681, and his death usually is considered the end of El Siglo de Oro in the arts and literature.The Habsburgs, both in Spain and Austria, were great patrons of art in their countries. El Escorial, the great royal monastery built by King Philip II, invited the attention of some of Europe's greatest architects and painters. Diego Velázquez, regarded as one of the most influential painters of European history and a greatly respected artist in his own time, cultivated a relationship with King Philip IV and his chief minister, the Count-Duke of Olivares, leaving us several portraits that demonstrate his style and skill. El Greco, another respected artist from the period, infused Spanish art with the styles of the Italian renaissance and helped create a uniquely Spanish style of painting. Some of Spain's greatest music is regarded as having been written in the period. Such composers as Tomás Luis de Victoria, Cristóbal de Morales, Francisco Guerrero, Luis de Milán and Alonso Lobo helped to shape Renaissance music and the styles of counterpoint and polychoral music, and their influence lasted far into the Baroque period which resulted in a revolution of music. Spanish literature blossomed as well, most famously demonstrated in the work of Miguel de Cervantes, the author of Don Quixote de la Mancha. Spain's most prolific playwright, Lope de Vega, wrote possibly as many as one thousand plays during his lifetime, of which over four hundred survive to the present day.