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THE RENAISSANCE EARLY RENAISSANCE During the 14th century the cultural movement of the Renaissance began in Italy before moving on to the rest of Europe. The movement was aided by the increased availability of paper and the invention of metal movable type that helped disseminate ideas more rapidly. The movement inspired a revival of interest in classical learning and the values of ancient Rome and Greece. The returned value on knowledge led to the innovations of Linear Perspective and advancements in the understanding of human anatomy. The increased understanding of the human form brought with it a transition from static, passive icons to realistic figures filled with emotion. Giotto di Bondone (1267-1337), a painter from the late Middle Ages is considered the “father of the renaissance” because he was the first of many artists to make great contributions to the movement such as the use of approximate perspective. Filippo Brunelleschi (1337-1446), a Florentine architect and engineer carried out a series of optical experiments that created the mathematical theory of perspective. Brunelleschi may have devised the method for use in architecture but the later publishing of the theory in 1435 by Leon Battista Alberti converted the principles to the depiction of three-dimensional space in the arts. Masaccio (1401-1428) would be one of the first artists to employ linear perspective in his fresco of the Holy Trinity. Piero della Francesca (1416-1492) took the use of perspective in his art to an obsession. Another Renaissance artist, Piero della Francesca (1416-1492) took the use of perspective in his art to an obsession. The use of perspective during the period would also lead to the use of other threedimensional rendering techniques such as Foreshortening. Andrea Mantegna (1430-1506) used unique vanishing points from below the figure like in his 1466 painting Lamentation of the Dead Christ. Mantegna’s use of extreme foreshortening created the sense that the viewer was directly in the scene, adding to the empathy the viewer has for the dead Christ. IMAGE 1: Masaccio The Holy Trinity Fresco IMAGE 2: Andrea Mantegna Lamentation of the Dead Christ Tempera on Canvas 1466 1|Page The Renaissance also brought with it a return to sculpture in the round. Donatello di Niccolŏ di Betto Bardi (1386-1466) is an Italian artist and sculptor known primarily for his statue of David that features the classical Contraposto stance. Donatello’s David is also believed to be the first full-scale nude statue since ancient times. NORTHERN RENAISSANCE The Renaissance movement altered as it moved north, focusing more on the meticulous rendering of details and less on the classical ideal of figures. The lack of interest in the classical ideal of figures might be in part due to a lack of access to Greek and Roman statues. The classical influence in replaced in the north with a clearly Gothic influence. The north also continued the Middle Ages use of Triptychs, or paintings comprised of three hinged panels that the outer portions could close in over the middle portion. Northern paintings were loaded with symbolic meanings just as Robert Campin’s The Merode Altarpiece from 1426 depicted in IMAGE 3. IMAGE 3: Robert Campin The Merode Altarpiece Triptych 1426 The Northern Renaissance was also responsible for innovations in the arts, one such innovation being the use of a new medium, Oil Paints and Oil-Glazing Technique by Jan Van Eyck. Van Eyck was a master of Composition and detail as demonstrated in his most famous work The Marriage of Giovanni Arnolfini depicted in IMAGE 4. By far the second most famous northern Renaissance artist is Hieronymus Bosch, a Netherlands artist who filled his work with enormous amounts of information and detail. IMAGE 4: Jan Van Eyck The Arnolfini Wedding Oil on Oak 1434 2|Page HIGH RENAISSANCE The Renaissance movement reached an apex in late 15th century that we refer to as the High Renaissance. The High Renaissance begins with Leonardo da Vinci's painting of The Last Supper in Milan and the death of Lorenzo de'Medici, a huge patron of the arts in Florence, and ends in 1527 with the Charles V.'s sacking of Rome. The Last Supper was commissioned by Duke Ludovico Sforza and his duchess Beatrice d'Este. The mural depicts the last supper from Jesus' final days as told in the Gospel of John, where Jesus announces that one of his twelve disciples would betray him. The fifteen feet by twenty nine feet mural covers a wall of Santa Maria delle Grazie monastery dining hall, was completed by Leonardo in 1498. IMAGE 5: Leonardo da Vinci The Last Supper Fresco 1498 Leonardo da Vinci is also renowned for his painting The Mona Lisa, which is a prime example of one of the four canonical painting modes of the Renaissance, Sfumato. The figure contains no harsh outlines and areas blend together. The Mona Lisa is thought to be a portrait of Francesco del Giocondo's wife Lisa Gheradini. Leonardo employed a pyramid design to build a calm sense, framed in the lit up face with dark elements to draw the viewer's attention to gaze of the figure, and placed the figure in front of an imaginary landscape featuring aerial perspective. Leonardo was one of the first painters to use Aerial Perspective to create a sense of depth. The piece was bought from Leonardo's assistant Salai by King Francois I. Salai had inherited the unfinished piece after Leonardo's death. Late in his life Leonardo is said to have regretted "never having completed a single work." IMAGE 6: Leonardo da Vinci The Mona Lisa Oil on Poplar 1519 3|Page IMAGE 7: Michelangelo Pietà Marble 1499 Leonardo's most famous contemporary, Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni; was an Italian sculptor, painter, architect, poet, and engineer. Two of Michelangelo's best known works, the Pietà and David were completed before he turned thirty years old. Both of these sculptures are characterized by an ideal balance of stillness and movement. Michelangelo also created one of the most influential works in Fresco despite his low opinion of painting when he depicted scenes from Genesis on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in Rome. Michelangelo employed one of the four canonical painting modes of the Renaissance, Cangiante in his work on the Sistine Chapel ceiling. He changed to lighter hues when the original hue could not be made light enough and to darker dues when the original hue could not be made dark enough. The use of cangiante allowed Michelangelo to depict shadows and highlights with more pure colors that didn't dull like the original hue when white or black were added. Michelangelo was the greatest practitioner of this technique. The fresco painting on the chapel ceiling was just part of Michelangelo's work in the chapel commissioned by Pope Julius II. IMAGE 8: Michelangelo Sistine Chapel Fresco 1511 4|Page The last great artist of the Renaissance movement, Raffaeloo Sanzio da Urbino, more commonly known as Raphael was an Italian painter and architect. Raphael unlike Leonardo was far more productive as an artist, completing a large body of work despite his death at age thirty seven. Raphael is associated with the canonical painting style of the Renaissance known as Chiaroscuro, an Italian term that literally means 'light-dark'; that refers to clear tonal contrasts which suggest volume and modeling of the subject. IMAGE 9: Raphael The Deposition of Christ Oil on Wood 1507 5|Page