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... (a) In Medieval Times people had to copy books by hands. So books are very precious. (b) In the late medieval times, a German called Gutenberg (古騰堡) invented a movable type printing press (活字版印刷機). Since printing was improved, books became very common in the Renaissance. ...
Italy:  Birthplace of the Renaissance
Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance

... Italy’s Advantage: Looking to Greece and Rome ...
Chapter 13 Lesson 2: The Italian Renaissance
Chapter 13 Lesson 2: The Italian Renaissance

... painter, best known for his painting on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in Rome. Raphael – painter most noted for the elimination of unimportant details, his best known works include The School of Athens. ...
ch 9_renaissance notes1
ch 9_renaissance notes1

... • Foreshortening- a method of applying perspective to an object or figure so that it seems to recede in space by shortening the depth dimension, making the form appear three- dimensional. • Cartoon- Drawing on paper • Fresco – a painting done on wet plaster means fresh in Italian • Genre – Scene fro ...
World History
World History

...  Two new art forms evolved  Portrait paintings  Wealthy patrons wanted to be remembered ...
The Renaissance - Warren County Schools
The Renaissance - Warren County Schools

... The Renaissance produced new ideas that were reflected in the arts, philosophy, and literature. Patrons, wealthy from newly expanded trade, sponsored works which glorified city-states in northern Italy. Education became ...
CHAPTER 13 LESSON 3 The Renaissance Spreads
CHAPTER 13 LESSON 3 The Renaissance Spreads

... The Northern Renaissance produced a second wave of talented painters, writers, and scholars. They made significant advances in the arts and learning. The Northern Renaissance and the Italian Renaissance differed in several ways. For one thing, Italian scholars valued classical learning. Northern Euro ...
Ch. 18 - HCC Learning Web
Ch. 18 - HCC Learning Web

...  nativity of Christ, incarnation - a god in earthly form  STRANGE! the odd sizes and proportions "supercharge" the image  floral and glass symbolism ...
What Was the Renaissance
What Was the Renaissance

... new and different from medieval art work. Paintings were more lifelike and less formal than medieval paintings. Writers tried to understand human nature through their writings. ...
Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance
Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance

... Upper-class women also knew the classics & were charming Expected to inspire art…NOT CREATE IT Better educated than M.A. women ...
IL RINASCIMENTO ITALIANO
IL RINASCIMENTO ITALIANO

... Many girls were sent to live in convents at a young age because the girl’s father did not have enough money to provide a dowry for her, but he had enough to make a contribution to the monastery. ...
Renaissance
Renaissance

... historian who wrote of the rebirth of art in Italy during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. The concept of the Renaissance was then applied more broadly to describe a dramatic rebirth of civilization in Western Europe. This view of the Renaissance involves two erroneous concepts. First, there i ...
Renaissance slides
Renaissance slides

... Leon Battista Alberti • Published written work on perspective • Knowledge of perspective spread and became basic aspect of art • Artists began to become consumed by perspective and was the basis of their philosophy ...
Renaissance Nie Kao and Arielle Hankerson
Renaissance Nie Kao and Arielle Hankerson

... and the backgrounds of most medieval paintings depicted the Holy Land. Renaissance artists created realistic scenes and images, depicted life-like human figures in their paintings, and used the well known Italian landscape as their backgrounds. Italian renaissance artists also used the technique kno ...
Fusion The Northern Renaissance
Fusion The Northern Renaissance

... In 1494, a French king claimed the throne of Naples in southern Italy and launched an invasion through northern Italy. As the war dragged on, many Italian artists and writers left for a safer life in Northern Europe. In addition, Northern European artists who studied in Italy carried Renaissance ide ...
To cite this page
To cite this page

... Seemingly unaffected by the Mannerist crisis, northern Italian painters such as Correggio (1494–1534) and Titian (1488/90–1576) continued to celebrate both Venus and the Virgin Mary without apparent conflict. The oil medium, introduced to northern Italy by Antonello da Messina and quickly adopted by ...
Northern Renaissance
Northern Renaissance

... patron of the Renaissance. Determine which field you will become a master in. Also, determine which patron you wish to attract. Once your masterpiece in the Renaissance style is created, write a letter to seek a Patron. Provide three reasons why you should be chosen as their master worker. ...
The Renaissance in Italy
The Renaissance in Italy

... • The Renaissance began around 1300 and reached its peak around 1500. • The Renaissance marked the transition from the medieval world to the modern world. • Interest was reawakened in the Greek and Roman writings and learning. • During the Middle Ages, scholars focused on religion. Renaissance think ...
Ch. 1-1    Italy:  Birthplace of the Renaissance
Ch. 1-1 Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance

... Greece and Rome Eventually, the Renaissance spread from Northern Italy into the rest of Europe Italy had three advantages that allowed the Renaissance to take hold ...
The Renaissance
The Renaissance

... Greece and Rome • Eventually, the Renaissance spread from Northern Italy into the rest of Europe • Italy had three advantages that allowed the Renaissance to take hold ...
Il Duomo St. Peter`s St. Paul`s US capital (Florence) (Rome) (London)
Il Duomo St. Peter`s St. Paul`s US capital (Florence) (Rome) (London)

... • By the end of the 15th century, Italian city-states no longer had a monopoly on Asian goods – Other nations want to get wealthy through trade – Explorations by Spain and Portugal in the late 1400s opened new trade routes to Asia ...
Economic Effects of the Crusades
Economic Effects of the Crusades

... Because of Italy’s geography, port areas became their own city-states and Italy was not unified. Because each area was a port, they accumulated wealth because of their trading and distribution methods. Wealth accumulated from European trade with the Middle East led to the rise of Italian city-states ...
Chapter 7 Renaissance
Chapter 7 Renaissance

... “fresh.” Frescoes were painted in churches all over Italy. In 1481 Botticelli painted three frescoes for the pope in the Sistine Chapel. Botticelli’s works also included many scenes of classical mythology. His images were much more realistic than medieval artists. However, he focused on the emotion ...
The Renaissance - Duluth High School
The Renaissance - Duluth High School

... Renaissance ideal for men • Upper class women were as well educated as men during the Renaissance, HOWEVER most women had less political, economic and social influence than women of the Middle Ages • Florence was the leading city during the Renaissance – textiles and banking • The Medici family rule ...
Renaissance Jeopardy
Renaissance Jeopardy

... Elizabethan Age ...
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Northern Mannerism



Northern Mannerism is the form of Mannerism found in the visual arts north of the Alps in the 16th and early 17th centuries. Styles largely derived from Italian Mannerism were found in the Netherlands and elsewhere from around the mid-century, especially Mannerist ornament in architecture; this article concentrates on those times and places where Northern Mannerism generated its most original and distinctive work.The three main centres of the style were in France, especially in the period 1530–50, in Prague from 1576, and in the Netherlands from the 1580s—the first two phases very much led by royal patronage. In the last 15 years of the century, the style, by then becoming outdated in Italy, was widespread across northern Europe, spread in large part through prints. In painting, it tended to recede rapidly in the new century, under the new influence of Caravaggio and the early Baroque, but in architecture and the decorative arts, its influence was more sustained.
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