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PowerPoint Presentation - The Renaissance in Art
PowerPoint Presentation - The Renaissance in Art

... traders, w/knowledge of Greek past, trade there often… ) • D. Resources (Rome… brought money from all over Europe with Church; Classical artifacts found all throughout daily life; many monasteries for ancient manuscripts, & universities to push scholarship/learning) ...
Medieval Europe had been a fragmented feudal
Medieval Europe had been a fragmented feudal

... - wealthiest family in Florence -Translates into power -Uncrowned king of Florence for years -Best known is Cosimo -Patron or financial supporter of the arts ...
File
File

... influenced Italian painters, sculptures, and architects. Like artists during the Middle Ages, Renaissance artists often depicted religious subjects, but they used a realistic style copied from classical models. Greek and Roman subjects also became popular. Renaissance painters used the technique cal ...
The Northern Renaissance
The Northern Renaissance

...  First great Flemish Renaissance painter was Jan van Eyck who developed techniques with oil based paints still used today  Oil paintings became popular and spread to Italy  Van Eyck’s paintings display unusually realistic details and reveal the personality of their subjects ...
Chapter 5 Section 1
Chapter 5 Section 1

... • What were the key developments of the city states? • What did the Medici Family do? • Who was the Renaissance Man? • What was the point of Machiavelli’s book The Prince? • Who wrote on the Nobility’s traits and ...
The Renaissance in Italy
The Renaissance in Italy

... • The Chinese had thousands of letters, but Europeans had only a small amount • 18. Why was Gutenberg’s printing press significant? • Enabled one man to produce hundreds of copies, making books cheap enough so that many people could buy them • 19. The European Renaissance shifted focus from around t ...
The Renaissance 1300 -1600
The Renaissance 1300 -1600

... • Humanists believed learning about the “classics” was the key to reforming society (Society was in need of reform because of the “Dark Ages”. • Humanists believed the individual had self-dignity and worth to society. – Consequently, they strongly supported education for ...
Michelangelo - Cloudfront.net
Michelangelo - Cloudfront.net

... in the sculpture gardens of the powerful Medici family. What followed was a remarkable career as an artist in the Italian Renaissance, recognized in his own time for his artistic virtuosity. ...
Renaissance and Reformation
Renaissance and Reformation

... have given their word lightly, who have known how to trick men with their cunning, and who, in the end, have overcome those abiding by honest principles…a prince, therefore, need not necessarily have all the good qualities I mentioned above, but he should certainly appear to have them…He should not ...
Renaissance Notes Section 1 and 2
Renaissance Notes Section 1 and 2

... According to Niccolo Machiavelli, there is “greater security in being feared than in being loved”, Provide a detailed explanation, in your introductory and initial body paragraphs why Machiavelli feels this way. Feel free to use the handout you received yesterday to aid in supporting the information ...
The Renaissance 1300-1500
The Renaissance 1300-1500

... “True, we love life, not because we are used to living, but because we are used to loving. There is always some madness in love, but there is also always some reason in madness.” ...
European renaissance and reformation
European renaissance and reformation

... brought back the study of subjects like history, literature, and philosophy.  Subjects ...
Leonardo Da Vinci - Silver Wolf Foreign Language
Leonardo Da Vinci - Silver Wolf Foreign Language

... Da Vinci was born in the Florence area of Italy in the 1400s. At the time, Florence was the center of the Renaissance’s beginning. Florence had been in the Dark Ages for many years, but by the time Da Vinci was born, life had settled down enough that people had time to learn about ancient art and sc ...
GONZAGA-IN-FLORENCE SYLLABUS
GONZAGA-IN-FLORENCE SYLLABUS

... Michelangelo, and Raphael ending with the 16 century Northern Renaissance when Italian artists were called to France by king Francis I (Rosso Fiorentino, Benvenuto Cellini) and Northern artists, (Albrecht Dürer), came down to Italy and were introduced to the new Renaissance style and the Neoplatonic ...
Art History – Precursors of the Renaissance.
Art History – Precursors of the Renaissance.

... observer. – “Reminder of death” – Realism ...
Lecture 1 – Middle Ages to Rococo
Lecture 1 – Middle Ages to Rococo

... The  architecture  of  the  Romanesque,  or  Norman,  period  is  signified  by  solidity  and   stability.   The   general   shapes   of   earliest   roman   basilicas   were   largely   kept   in   the   Romanesque   church,   however   som ...
To truly understand the period in history that we call the
To truly understand the period in history that we call the

... seen. Giotto’s works “gave nature a more proper place and his people were real people.” Giotto’s first great work was a painting of the Last Judgement. In this work he painted the face of the man who had commissioned the work and he brought the art of the period a giant step-forward by showing natur ...
Name: Date: The Renaissance The Renaissance was a period in
Name: Date: The Renaissance The Renaissance was a period in

... between European cities and the rest of the world weakened the feudal manor and helped cities grow. Local lords were not as powerful as they were during the Middle Ages and peasants found new freedoms at home and in the cities. The decline of feudalism and the movement of people and ideas made the R ...
Raphael Biography - Silver Wolf Foreign Language
Raphael Biography - Silver Wolf Foreign Language

... same brusqueness that got Michelangelo into trouble. His style was also considered more refined. He didn’t have the same inventive genius of Michelangelo or Leonardo da Vinci, but he had a supreme grace of painting. He concentrated on a more classical interpretation of perfection, but was still some ...
Art and Humanism
Art and Humanism

... rediscovery of classical civilization but rather in the use which was made of classical models to test the authority underlying conventional taste and wisdom” ...
Italy:  Birthplace of the Renaissance
Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance

... Large towns are a natural meeting place where people can exchange goods and ideas—allowing an intellectual revolution The bubonic plague killed so many people (60%) that labors could demand better wages and a better standard of living Merchants started to look at other interests (art, literature, po ...
Renaissance – Uffizi Gallery Crawl
Renaissance – Uffizi Gallery Crawl

... Biagioda Cesena, stated, “"it was mostly disgraceful that in so holy a place there should have been depicted all those nude figures, exposing themselves so shamefully, and that it was no place for a pope’s chapel but rather for the public bathrooms and bars!” ...
The Last Supper
The Last Supper

... contact with Arab and African achievements ...
Renaissance - Mrs. Lehman Mrs. Lehman
Renaissance - Mrs. Lehman Mrs. Lehman

... • Location on the sea encouraged trade with the Muslim world • Muslim scholars helped bring over science and technology ...
The Renaissance
The Renaissance

... popular because it gave depth to the paintings ...
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Italian Renaissance painting



Italian Renaissance painting is the painting of the period beginning in the late 13th century and flourishing from the early 15th to late 16th centuries, occurring in the Italian peninsula, which was at that time divided into many political areas. The painters of Renaissance Italy, although often attached to particular courts and with loyalties to particular towns, nonetheless wandered the length and breadth of Italy, often occupying a diplomatic status and disseminating artistic and philosophical ideas.The city of Florence in Tuscany is renowned as the birthplace of the Renaissance, and in particular of Renaissance painting. A detailed background is given in the companion articles Renaissance and Renaissance architecture.Italian Renaissance painting can be divided into four periods: the Proto-Renaissance (1300–1400), the Early Renaissance (1400–1475), the High Renaissance (1475–1525), and Mannerism (1525–1600). These dates are approximations rather than specific points because the lives of individual artists and their personal styles overlapped the different periods.The Proto-Renaissance begins with the professional life of the painter Giotto and includes Taddeo Gaddi, Orcagna and Altichiero.The Early Renaissance was marked by the work of Masaccio, Fra Angelico, Paolo Uccello, Piero della Francesca and Verrocchio.The High Renaissance period was that of Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael and Titian.The Mannerist period included Andrea del Sarto, Pontormo and Tintoretto. Mannerism is dealt with in a separate article.
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