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ITALIAN RENAISSANCE ART 14th – 16th century Renaissance, republics, Guilds, Black Death, Great Schism, vernacular literature, The Divine Comedy, humanism, Petrarch, patron, naturalism, altarpiece, fresco, grisaille, Lamentation, Pieta, chiaroscuro, International Style, Annunciation, virgin birth, triptych, diptych, moveable type, "Renaissance man”, Medici family, Giorgio Vasari, "true" linear perspective, Leon Battista Alberti, St. Francis of Assisi, St. Peter, St. Augustine, continuous narrative, Vitruvius, trompe l'oeil, artifice, cartography, optics, cartoon, chiaroscuro, sfumato, genre painting, figura serpentinata, corporeality, contrapossto VOCABULARY • Why was the Renaissance considered “rebirth”? Compare a Gothic sculpture with an early Renaissance example. • How was this rebirth different from earlier versions such as Carolingian and Ottonian? • What were the major events that changed Europe in the 14th century? Speculate on how people’s thinking changed. • Why is Giotto considered the first modern painter? Give an example of one of his works and why it is considered “modern”. • How did patronage affect the arts? Who were the patrons of the Renaissance? • How is the 16th century Renaissance a continuation or divergence from the previous century? Compare works from those centuries. • How did the Catholic Church use art to its advantage? Give an example. • What is Mannerism? Who were the major Mannerist artists? • List in chronological order 12 -15 important artists of the Italian Renaissance starting with Giotto. Explain why you consider each to be important. MAJOR ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS • Discuss the formal and iconographic characteristics of fourteenthcentury Italian art • Explain how the plague affected artistic production in fourteenthcentury Italy • Describe the role humanism played in fourteenth-century Italian art • Discuss the art and architecture created for monastic orders • Describe the material, formal, and technical characteristics of fourteenth-century Italian architecture • Explain the reintroduction of the optical experience in the art of the fourteenth century CHAPTER 19 EARLY RENAISSANCE ITALY AROUND 1400 The Pulpit of the Pisa Cathedral, 1259-1260 The Annunciation and Nativity, Nicola Pisano, detail of the pulpit of the Pisa Cathedral, 1259-1260 COMPARE FORMAL ELEMENTS Death of the Virgin; south transept of Strasbourg Cathedral, Strasbourg, France ca. 1230 CE Saint Francis Altarpiece, Bonaventura Berlingheiri, tempera on wood, c. 1235 What era might this work have come from? Describe the figure. Madonna Enthroned with Angels and Prophets, Cimabue, tempera on wood, ca. 1280-1290 Uffizi, Florence Madonna Enthroned Giotto di Bondone tempera on wood, ca. 1310, Uffizi, Florence Compare these two works discussing subject and style. Arena Chapel, frescoes by Giotto 1305-1306, Padua, Italy Lamentation, Giotto di Bondone, ca. 1305, Arena Chapel, fresco, Padua, Italy Lamentation over the Dead Christ; Saint Pantaleimon 1164 CE; wall painting Nerezi, MACEDONIA Virgin and Child Enthroned with Saints, Duccio di Buoninsegna, principal panel of the Maesta Altarpiece, 1308-1311, tempera on wood Annunciation, Simone Martini and Lippo Memmi, 1333, tempera and gold leaf on wood, Uffizi Gallery, Florence Peaceful City, Ambrogio Lorenzetti, 1338-1339, fresco, Siena, Italy Four Crowned Saints Nanni di Banco ca. 1408 – 1414, Or San Michele, marble Compare these works • Explain the key aspects of Renaissance art and architectural theory • Identify the formal and iconographic characteristics of 15thcentury Italian art • Discuss the formal and material characteristics of 15th-century Italian architecture • Describe the role and influence of patrons • Identify and describe the integration of sacred and secular concerns • Explain the relationship of science, humanism, and artistic production • Describe the materials and techniques of Renaissance painting, sculpture, and printmaking Chapter 21 Sacrifice of Isaac, Lorenzo Ghiberti, competition panel for the east doors, baptistry of Florence Cathedral, 14011402, bronze, Florence Sacrifice of Isaac, Filippo Brunelleschi, competition panel for the east doors, baptistery of Florence Cathedral, 1401-1402, bronze, Florence Compare the two choices. Which one do you think won and why? “Gates of Paradise” Lorenzo Ghiberti, east doors of the baptistery of Florence Cathedral, bronze, 1425-1452, Florence, Italy “Gates of Paradise”, Lorenzo Ghiberti Scene: Isaac with Essau “Gates of Paradise”, Lorenzo Ghiberti Scene – Genesis: Adam and Eve Florence Cathedral or “il Duomo” Florence, Italy Brunelleschi 1430-1436 CE Saint Mark, Donatello, 1411-1413, marble COMPARE THESE WORKS Tribute Money, Masaccio, 1425, fresco COMPARE THESE WORKS Holy Trinity Masaccio 1425, fresco Holy Trinity, Masaccio “I am once what you are, and what I am you will become.” Santo Spirito, Brunelleschi 1436, Florence, Italy interior of Amiens Cathedral Review Early Italian Renaissance 1. Who are the essential artists of the early Renaissance? 2. Choose one artist and describe one of their works. 3. Define humanism. Describe one work that might address humanism. David, Donatello, 1420s – 1460s Florence, Italy COMPARE David, Verrocchio, 1465, bronze Gattamelata, Donatello, ca. 1445-1450, bronze, Padua, Italy Santa Maria Novella, Leon Battista Alberti, ca. 1458-1470, Florence , Italy Last Supper, Andrea del Castagno, 1447, fresco, monastery, Florence, Italy Birth of Venus, Sandro Botticelli, ca. 1482, tempera on canvas, Uffizi, Florence, Italy Compare these works’ style and subject. Christ Delivering the Keys of the Kingdom to St. Peter, Pietro Perugino, 1482, fresco, Sistine Chapel, Rome Portrait of a Youth, Sandro Botticelli, early 1480s, tempera on panel Madonna and Child with Angels, Fra Filippo Lippi, ca. 1455, tempera on wood, Uffizi, Florence, Italy Dead Christ, Andrea Mantegna, ca. 1501, tempera on canvas, Milan, Italy Damned Cast into Hell, Luca Signorelli, 1499-1504, fresco, Orvieto, Italy detail Brera Altarpiece, Piero della Francesca, ca. 1472-1474, oil on panel, Milan, Italy 1 2 3 4 Open Note Cards Quiz Identify each of these artworks. Write out the CREDIT LINE, SUBJECT, STYLE, and SIGNIFICANCE. Use two or more vocabulary terms for each. Black Death, Great Schism, vernacular literature, The Divine Comedy, humanism, Petrarch, patron, naturalism, altarpiece, fresco, grisaille, Lamentation, Pieta, chiaroscuro, International Style, Annunciation, virgin birth, triptych, diptych, moveable type, "Renaissance man”, Medici family, Giorgio Vasari, "true" linear perspective, Leon Battista Alberti, St. Francis of Assisi, St. Peter, St. Augustine, continuous narrative, Vitruvius, trompe l'oeil, artifice, corporeality, cartoon, contrapossto, chiaroscuro, sfumato, genre painting High Italian Renaissance TOP FOUR BREAKTHROUGHS - Use of Perspective - Development of Chiaroscuro - Pyramid composition - Use of Oil on canvas Chapter 22 Objectives • Describe the formal and iconographic characteristics of High Renaissance, Venetian, and Mannerist painting and sculpture. • Identify the formal characteristics that distinguish High Renaissance from Mannerist architecture. • Explain the religious and philosophical influences on High Renaissance art. • Describe the materials and techniques of Renaissance painting and sculpture. • Discuss the status of artists in Renaissance society. • Explain how the experiments of 15th century art were employed by 16th-century artists. • Compare the artistic philosophies that distinguished Venetian Renaissance art from contemporary Florentine and Roman work. ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS Vitruvian Man Leonardo da Vinci, 1487, pen and ink, In his treatise, De Architectura, Vitruvius described the human figure as being the principal source of proportion among the Classical orders of architecture. - Perspective - Chiaroscuro - Pyramid configuration - Oil on canvas Virgin of the Rocks Leonardo da Vinci ca. 1485, oil on canvas Paris - Perspective - Chiaroscuro - Pyramid configuration - Oil on canvas Birth of Venus, Sandro Botticelli, ca. 1482, tempera on canvas, Uffizi, Florence, Italy The Last Supper, Leonardo da Vinci, ca. 1495-1498, Milan - Perspective - Chiaroscuro - Pyramid configuration - Oil on canvas Andrea del Castgno, 1447 Florence Cartoon for Virgin and Child with Saint Anne and the Infant Saint John, Leonardo da Vinci, charcoal, ca. 1505-1507, London Mona Lisa, Leonardo Da Vinci 1503-1505 oil on panel Portrait of a Youth, Sandro Botticelli, early 1480s, tempera on panel Pieta, Michelangelo, 1498, marble, Rome The Last Judgment, Michelangelo, fresco, 1534-1541 Sistine Chapel, Rome Italy Capitoline Hill, Michelangelo, 1536-46, Rome, Italy David Michelangelo, 1501-1504 Florence Moses, Michelangelo ca. 1513-1515 Rome Sistine Chapel ceiling, Michelangelo, 1508-1512, fresco,Vatican City, Rome The Creation of Adam, Michelangelo 1511-1512, fresco Sistine Chapel,Vatican City Heliocentrism • Who were the major proponents of this system? • How do you connect this concept with the art of this period? School of Athens, Raphael 1509-1511, fresco,Vatican City, Rome Go to page 630 And Question 30 Galatea Raphael 1513, fresco Rome Marriage of the Virgin, Raphael, 1504, oil on wood, Milan Bound Slave, Michelangelo 1513-1516 Paris Tiempietto, Bramante ca. 1502 Rome St. Peter’s Cathedral, Michelangelo, 1546-1564, Rome Venetian Renaissance Giovanni Bellini Giorgione Titian Venus of Urbino, Titian, 1538, oil on canvas, Uffizi, Florence The Pastoral Symphony, Giorgione, c. 1508, oil on canvas, Paris Assumption of the Virgin Titian, 1516-1518, oil on canvas It took Titian two years (1516– 1518) to complete the oil painting whose dynamic threetier composition and color scheme established him as the preeminent painter north of Rome. San Zaccaria Altarpiece, Giovanni Bellini 1505; oil on canvas, San Zaccaria, Venice COMPARE THESE WORKS The Feast of the Gods, Giovanni Bellini, 1514, oil on canvas, National Gallery of Art COMPARE THESE WORKS Birth of Venus, Sandro Botticelli, ca. 1482, tempera on canvas, Uffizi, Florence, Italy Isabella d’Este, Titian, 1534 – 1536, oil on canvas, Vienna Madonna of the Pesaro Family, Titian, 1519-1526, Venice Italian Renaissance Art - Review Online Questions: o Table 1 – Chapter 19 o Table 2 – Chapter 21 o Table 3 - Chapter 22 Tuesday Quiz – 70 minutes o 30 multiple choice questions o Three timed writes: 10 minutes each Tuesday’s Short Essay Take Home Question o Patronage – discuss today and Thursday Chapter 19 - Critical Thinking Question 1: Compare and contrast the formal characteristics exhibited by Pietro Cavallini and Cimabue. Cite specific examples in your answer. Question 2: Discuss the political and artistic implications of Duccio's Maestà. Question 3: Explain how Ambrogio Lorenzetti’s art reflects its social and political environment. Question 4: Discuss the impact of the Black Death on Italian fourteenthcentury art. Cite specific examples in your answer. Question 5: Compare the form and iconography of frescoes by Ambrogio Lorenzetti and Giotto. Chapter 21 - Critical Thinking Question 1: Compare and contrast Robert Campin’s Merode Altarpiece and Ghirlandaio’s Birth of the Virgin. Question 2: Using at least five artists, explain why 15th-century Italian art and architecture are frequently called experimental. Cite specific examples in your answer. Question 3: Discuss the significance of the completion of the Baptistery doors for the Cathedral of Florence. Question 4: Identify the portraiture strategies employed by 15thcentury Italian artists. Cite specific examples in your answer. Question 5: Compare and contrast the manners in which Northern European and Florentine painters merged the secular and sacred spheres in the 15th century. Cite specific examples in your answer. Chapter 22 - Critical Thinking Question 1: Compare and contrast Alberti’s Palazzo Rucellai, and Sangallo’s Farnese Palace. Question 2: In what ways does the art of Venice contrast with that of Rome during the 16th century? Cite specific examples in your answer. Question 3: Identify the roles women played in 16th-century Italian art. Cite specific examples in your answer. Question 4: Explain why 16th-century Italian architecture is described as sculptural. Cite specific examples in your answer. Question 5: Discuss the influence the Counter Reformation may have had on the visual arts of sixteenth-century Italy. Cite specific examples in your answer. Italian Renaissance Take Home Question Patronage has been and continues to be an important element in the creation of artworks, whether for private spaces such as homes and private chapels or for the public at-large in structures such as churches or civic buildings. The High Renaissance artists could not have created such grand works without the support of popes, affluent families and princely courts. Choose two works of art – one must be from the High Renaissance - that benefited from patronage. Compare the types of patrons of each work. Then discuss how the patron may have influenced this work, its subject, style or location.