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Florence Creates a Renaissance Filippo Brunelleschi 1377-1446 Cathedral of Florence Santa Maria del Fiore Begun in late 13th century but left unfinished Did not know how to span 140 foot wide octagonal space Solution to the dome problem came from Filippo Brunelleschi--Brunelleschi’s Dome, Il Duomo cupola •Massive ribs arch 100 feet up to create dome. •Has two dome shells concealing 24 ribs …3x the Gothic 8 •Brunelleschi studies geometry, creating architecture based on the circle and the square quatrefoil design Baptistery Doors, 1401 The Sacrifice of Isaac Filippo Brunelleschi Lorenzo Ghiberti--the winner Crowded, Gothic verticality Horizontal, simple, elegant Brunelleschi describes and uses one-point perspective sometime between 1413-1425 ….and Ghiberti quickly follows __________ Horizon line the VANISHING POINT is the place on the horizon line where our eye focuses and all lines converge Ghiberti’s East Doors 1425-52 No more quatrefoil One-point perspective Leon Battista Alberti (1404-72) another Italian artist and philosopher, further defines perspective Alberti’s window, around 1435 What are other ways to deal with perspective? Attempt it…. Gaddi, fresco, 1327,Presentation of Mary Ignore it… Perfect it…. Mantegna, fresco, oculus, 1473 Pontormo, oil, 1515, Joseph in Egypt Play with it… Bend it… Hogarth, etching, 1754, Perspectival Absurdities Escher, lithography, 1938, Day and Night Dream it….change the rules Flatten it… Oil, 1937 Miro, 1926, oil, Person Throwing a Stone at a Bird “ I have painted feet, more or less realistically, outrageously enlarged or distorted. The foot has always been intensely interesting to me—its form, its function. Isn't it the foot that allows man to make contact with the earth? And there's irony in it, too. We talk about putting our foot in our mouth, don't we? No matter, during those years [1925] my paintings no longer showed the pull of gravity; I wanted to give it an astral quality. My preoccupation with dreams became mixed up with eroticism, whereas my open writing was enhanced by the addition of dotted lines. I also made poem-paintings, with written texts. My last work from this dream period were painted on white backgrounds. Their sharper linear quality reminds some people of frescoes.” Miro, 1962 Fra Angelico (1387-1455) • • • • • • • Dominican monk Name means “Brother Angel” Only painted religious subjects Favorite subject was angels Knew perspective, studied Masaccio Paintings are a blend of Gothic and Early Renaissance styles Died in Rome while painting for the pope Annunciation c. 1445-1450, fresco Donatello (1386-1466) • The Prophet (Lo Zuccone), 1423-25 • “Pumpkinhead” • Marble • Seen 55 feet above ground • Commissioned for the Florence Cathedral Donatello • David, c 1430-32 • First life-size bronze nude in the round since antiquity • Medici Palace Donatello’s David, c. 1430 First classical nude in the round since antiquity How does it resemble the classical Roman sculpture on the left? Masaccio (1401-1428) • Lived in Florence • Friends with Brunelleschi and Donatello • Nickname means “sloppy” (Giorgio Vasari) • First to use perspective and atmospheric perspective in painting • Works are considered the first monument to Humanism • Rumored to have been poisoned by a rival painter • • • • • • The Holy Trinity, ca. 1425, fresco Linear or one-point perspective Vanishing point at feet; triangular composition Science and religion “What you are, I once was; what I am, you will become.” Memento mori—Adam’s skeleton Masaccio • Expulsion from the Garden, c. 1425 • Brancacci Chapel • Adam and Eve being banished from the Garden of Eden • shows that moment that they realize their mortality Masaccio • The Tribute Money, c. 1427, fresco • St. Peter appears 3 times • Linear and atmospheric perspective Andrea Mantegna • Dead Christ, c. 1500 • Tempera on canvas • foreshortening • • • • • • The Birth of Venus, c. 1482 Commissioned by the Medicis Tempera on canvas Commissioned by the Medicis The first fully nude female since antiquity Dual nature of love--- both sensuous and chaste Botticelli • • • • • • Botticelli Allegory of Spring, c. 1478 Tempera on wood Chloris, the nymph of springtime, is chased by the south wind; she turns into a flower girl, symbolizing Florence Cupid shoots Chastity Beauty and Passion are at her side Mercury is both leader of the 3 graces and god of the winds, driving away winter and making way for spring Venus and Mars, 1485 egg tempera on board Botticelli •Baby satyrs are having a great time playing while the mighty warrior sleep •The goddess of love looks both skeptical and protective •Can the power of love defeat war? Savonarola, 1452-98 chases away the Renaissance in Florence…and the Medicis…and art and music • • • • • this fire-and-brimstone monk is against luxury and excess, immoral art 1494: the Medicis are chased out of Florence and Savonarola becomes head 1497: Savonarola begins Bonfires of the Vanities, throwing art, books, mirrors, games into the fire at the town square Botticelli masterpieces are lost to the flames 1498: Savonarola is charged with heresy and thrown into the flames--at the same location as his bonfires