The Renaissance will see a shift in art from art purely for the sake of glorifying God and teaching Biblical and Catholic lessons to art for the sake of also glorifying human beings and their Earthly emotions experiences surroundings ID: 742775
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Slide1
Renaissance Art
As with Renaissance Literature, three themes of Renaissance Art: Humanism, Secularism, and Classicism.
The Renaissance will see a shift in art - from art purely for the sake of glorifying God and teaching Biblical and Catholic lessons to art for the sake of
also
glorifying human beings and their Earthly emotions, experiences, surroundings.
Realism will be the key to Renaissance art, as compared to Medieval Art…Slide2
Carolingian Evangelist
Late 8
th CenturyFrom the Codex Aureus of Lorsch (an illuminated Gospel Book from the Charlemagne period of the Frankish kingdom)Slide3
A typical Medieval depiction of Christ
A Christ Pantokrator (Christ with the halo in a cross form)
From the 11th CenturySlide4
The Morgan Leaf
– detached from the 12
th Century Winchester Bible (English)Depicts scenes from the life of DavidSlide5
Medieval depiction of Charlemagne’s coronation in 800.Slide6
Giotto,
Life of St. Francis
Fresco in Bardi FamilyChapel
Giotto di Bondone (1266-1337)Slide7
Fra Angelico,
Adoration of the Magi
Fra Angelico, AKA Fra Giovanni da Fiesole (Brother John from Fiesole 1395 - 1455)Slide8
Botticelli,
Adoration of the MagiSlide9
Realism – the key difference.
Contributes to the humanism of Italian Art
Achieved through use of new techniques:PerspectiveChiaroscuro and realistic coloringOverlapping figures
MovementUse of realistic fore- and backgroundsSlide10
The Italian RenaissanceSlide11
Sandro Botticelli (1445–1510)
Birth of VenusSlide12
Botticelli, PrimaveraSlide13
The “Big Four” of Italian Renaissance Art
Leonardo
Da Vinci (1452 - 1519)Michelangelo
Buonarroti (1475 - 1564)
Raphael
-
Raffaello
Sanzio
da
Urbino
(1483 – 1520)
Titian
-
Tiziano
Vecellio
(c. 1488 - 1576)Slide14
Vitruvian ManSlide15
The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne
Leonardo da Vinci
Depicts St. Anne, her daughter the Virgin Mary, and the infant Jesus.
Size of this preview: 447 × 599 pixelsSlide16
Leonardo Da Vinci, The Last SupperSlide17
Leonardo Da Vinci,
Mona
LisaSlide18
Michelangelo,
Sistine Chapel
The Entire Vault here- Ceiling depicts the stories of the Book of Genesis, back wall is The Last Judgement Slide19
The Sistine Chapel CeilingSlide20
Sistine Chapel, Creation of AdamSlide21
Details from The Sistine Chapel Ceiling
The Prophet Ezechiel
The Creation of the Sun,
the Moon and the PlanetsSlide22
The Last JudgementSlide23
Michelangelo,
PietaSlide24
Michelangelo,
DavidSlide25
Raphael,
School of AthensSlide26
The School of Athens
detail-“Plato & Aristotle”Slide27
The Parnassus (Raphael)Slide28
Raphael,
MadonnaSlide29
Group of Swiss Soldiers, the Mass of Bolsena
Portrait of a Cardinal
More Raphael…..Slide30
Titian, The Venus of UrbinoSlide31
Titan, BacchanaliaSlide32
Titian
Pope Paul III and His
NephewsSlide33
Titian
Portrait of Charles V at the Battle of MuhlbergSlide34
The Northern RenaissanceSlide35
Jan Van Eyck, Arnolfini WeddingSlide36
Durer, Self-PortraitSlide37
Durer, Adoration of the MagiSlide38
Durer engraving,
Hands with BibleSlide39
Hans Holbein, Henry the VIIISlide40
Hans Holbein, Jane SeymourSlide41
Holbein, Sir Thomas MoreSlide42
Hans Holbein, ErasmusSlide43
Bruegel, Children’s GamesSlide44
Children’s Games, detailSlide45
Bruegel, Peasant WeddingSlide46
Peasant Wedding, detailSlide47
Bruegel, Hunters in the SnowSlide48
Bruegel
The Blind Leading the BlindSlide49
Lady with an Ermine
da
Vinci
ENTRY # 7 (9/18/13)
Evaluate the Painting below in terms of the three Renaissance themes, as well as the technical characteristics of Renaissance Art