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http://www.youtube. com/watch?v=4mgS PiAiBjU The Renaissance 14th Century – 17th Century The Growth of Italian City-States • Overseas trade, spurred by the Crusades, led to their growth • Northern Italy had a wealthy merchant class • It’s classical heritage of Greece and Rome Florence becomes the most influential city-state Florence was mostly urban while the rest of Europe was rural. Because of the plague, many of the city’s survivors could demand hi Because Florence was small, many of its citizens could be involved • • • • Italian merchants displayed their wealth by giving financial support to artists Lorenzo de Medici (Lorenzo the Magnificent) was a generous patron of the arts The Crusades made Europeans eager to learn about the world around them Church leaders became patrons of the arts by financially supporting artists • Renaissance means “re-birth” which refers to revival in arts and learning • Scholars became interested in ancient Greek and Roman culture • Artists used ancient art as models • Filippo Brunelleschi designed buildings after studying Roman ruins ppo Brunelleschi – Commissioned to build the cathe ed unique architectural concepts, studied the ancien me Comparisons St. Paul’s (London) US capital (Washington) Characteristics of Renaissance Art • • • • • • • Three dimensional (much more realistic – especially with sculptures) Conveyed emotions & feelings Not all religious themes – wealthy merchant class could commission whatever they wanted (emphasis on Greek & Roman culture) Used new materials (including frescoes & oil painting) Use of perspective (liked to paint people at the forefront of a natural setting) Used balance & proportion Colors were lighter and more romantic in nature Giovanni Giotto Giotto developed a new artistic style for creating frescos (paint on wet plaster walls): – Painted human figures that appeared lifelike – Painted people with emotion – Painted people in frescos interacting with each other Giotto’s “Lamentation of Christ” c. 1305 Donato Donatello • Donatello was the greatest sculptor of the Renaissance • Medieval sculptors only carved the front of a statue, but Donatello wanted sculptures to be viewed from all sides like Greek & Roman statues Donatello’s “David” became the first large, free-standing human sculpture c. 1440s Tommaso Masaccio Masaccio added to Giotto’s innovative style by using perspective: showing objects in the foreground as larger than objects in the background, which gives the illusion of depth. Perspective… Masaccio’s “The Tribute Money” 1420s Michelangelo A favorite of the Medicis and the Pope Michelangelo’s “Pieta” depicts the Virgin Mary cradling the limp body of the crucified Jesus (1499). Michelangelo’s statue of “David” expresses the Renaissance belief in human dignity and greatness (1501-1504). • • • His greatest work is the 130 ft x 44 ft ceiling of the Sistine Chapel; which shows Biblical images of amazing detail, power, & beauty. Michelangelo painted more than 300 massive human figures onto the 5,800 square-foot ceiling while laying on his back, between 1508 and 1512. The ceiling contains illustrations from the creation of Adam to the story of Noah. of the Heavens ne Chapel Details Creation of Man • Michelangelo returned to the chapel to begin painting the altarpiece “The Last Judgment” from 1537-1541. • This painting features Christ judging souls as they rise and fall from each side of the painting. Bartholomew's flayed skin Raphael • • • Raphael “perfected” Renaissance painting. He became the favorite painter of the Pope because of his amazing detailed paintings showing Greeks & Romans along with Renaissance people. “School of Athens” is his greatest work. – All of the important Greek philosophers and thinkers are included in this painting all of the great personalities of the classical period – A great variety of poses – Raphael worked on this commission at the same time that Michelangelo was doing the Sistine Chapel. Plato and Aristotle Socrates Raphael Alexander the Great Michelangelo Pythagoras Zoroaster Ptolemy Euclid ective! rothal y Raphael (1504) Leonardo da Vinci A true “Renaissance Man” Leonardo was an inventor, painter, sculptor, & scientist ● Click to edit the outline text format – Second Outline Level ● Third Outline Level – Fourth Outline Level ● ● • Fifth Outline Level Sixth Outline Level Seventh Outline LevelClick to edit Master text styles – Second level • Third level o, the Artist • Convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan, Italy • Da Vinci’s “Last Supper” shows Jesus’ last meeting with the • The facial expressions, detail, and emotion made it a master pper – Geometry vertical per – Perspective horizontal Vinci “Code” Mary Magdalene? Da Vinci’s “Mona Lisa” is known for its emotion and depth. Aug. 23rd was the 100th anniversary of the discovery that it was stolen. Thousands of people came to the museum to see the empty nail in the space where the painting had hung. Interesting History of the “Mona Lisa” • On August 12, 1911, a Louvre employee stole it by entering the building during regular hours, hiding in a broom closet and walking out with it hidden under his coat after the museum had closed • After keeping the painting in his apartment for two years, the man grew impatient and was caught when he attempted to sell it to an art dealer; it was exhibited all over Italy and returned to the Louvre in 1913 • • • • In 1956, the lower part of the painting was severely damaged when someone doused it with acid On December 30 of that same year, another person damaged the painting by throwing a rock at it The result was a speck of pigment near Mona Lisa's left elbow The painting is now covered with bulletproof security glass Notebooks 00 pages) Leonardo, the S Pages from his N the Engineer: • • Leonardo sketch He intended to po • Leonardo’s many military inventions included this design for an ar • Four soldiers sitting inside could turn cranks to move the wheels o Da Vinci also invented a giant cross bow. It's difficult to know whether it would have Vitruvian Man • The length of a man's outspread arms is equal to his height • The maximum width of the shoulders is a quarter of a man's height • The distance from the elbow to the tip of the hand is onefifth of a man's height Renaissance Writers • • • Francesco Petrarch collected ancient writings & also wrote his own collection of love poems called Sonnets to Laura Baldassare Castiglione wrote The Book of the Courtier describing manners, skills (the Ideal Man & Woman) Niccolo Machiavelli wrote The Prince – essentially a primer on how to rule a kingdom • • The Renaissance spread from Italy as scholars from other areas visited Italian city-states & took the new ideas they saw back Led to the Northern Renaissance – Kings bought Renaissance art, helping to spread new ideas – Ideas spread to the Holy Roman Empire (Germany), England, France, Belgium, Netherlands – Still recovering from the plague – Renaissance in Germany was very religious—Christian humanists criticized the church & society (will lead to Protestant Reformation) Erasmus • • • • Dutch priest & humanist, spent time studying in Italy Rewrote the New Testament in Greek Urged for a new version of the bible that the average man could read (vernacular) poked fun at greedy merchants and pompous priests in his writings The Renaissanc • Renaissance in England focused on social issues—Thomas More criticized society through Utopia • William Shakespeare— playwright who wrote plays based on ideas from classics & universal human qualities Johann Gutenburg • • • Printed the first complete edition of the Bible in 1456 using the first printing press More Europeans began to read Exposed people to new ideas …. Leads to the Reformation • The Renaissance encouraged a new spirit of adventure and discovery • The Renaissance spirit played an important role in helping to launch the Age of Exploration