early renaissance in italy rebirth of classical ideals, southern style

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Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

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Page 1: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Early Renaissance in Italy

Rebirth of Classical Ideals,

Southern Style

Page 2: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

15th century Italy was not a country, but a group of individual and sometime warring city-states such as Florence, Milan, Padua, etc. Merchant families- such as the Medici- rose to power.

THEY BECAME MAJOR ART PATRONS AND HELPED LAUNCH THE ITALIAN RENAISSANCE

Page 3: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Early Renaissance Italy….

• Humanism philosophy dominates literature, arts, science, and even religion

• Study things as they really are, age of discovery (remember Columbus was going to North America during this time frame)

• Great influence of Van Eyck and Flemish/Northern Renaissance

• However added classical studies of antiquity from Greece/Roman traditions

Page 4: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Artistic Innovations

• Like the North, Italian artists showed realistic human forms, but with greater concern to anatomy and classical influences

• Brunelleschi - artist/architect developed the use of perspective to an astonishing degree

• Return of classical large scale sculptures, nudes, and many secular art works

• Patrons were powerful families who ruled the city states, such as the Medici

• Medici, Godfathers of the Renaissance

Page 5: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

What about Perspective????

• Atmospheric and intuitive perspective already in place from Netherlands/Northern Renaissance

• Italian Renaissance artists went a step further, studying it mathematically

Page 6: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Uccello shows a battle for one of the city states here in this tempera painting, of 1438.

He also shows the use of pserpsecitve as “discovered” or developed by Brunelleschi.

Itlaian Renaissance went a step fruther than their Flemish colleagues in perspective…

Page 7: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style
Page 8: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Perugino, The Delivery of the Keys to Saint Peter, Fresco, 1481, right wall of the Sistine Chapel, Rome. Shows linear perspective and low horizon line, orthogonals to v. point

Page 9: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Brunelleschi’s Dome (Florence Cathedral), 1417-36; 1471, etc.

Brunelleschi was favored by the Medici and jailed when Cosimo was jailed.

Artist who perfected system of mathematical perspective

Daring innovator, engineer.

Designed dome WITHOUT center supports; architectural feat for that time. Dome supported on lantern.

Flashcard

Applications-of-linear-perspective-in-the-renaissance go to 18:30 min

Page 10: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Church of San Lorenzo (nave), 1430s-70, Brunelleschi - did 1st architectural perspective drawing using his theory of mathemetical perspective for patrons

Page 11: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Brunelleschi designed & built the Foundling Hospital (orphanage) in 1419. The medallions are still loved today …

Patron: Silk & Goldsmith’s Guild of Florence as a public service

Example of Renaissance style architecture-Corinthian style column with high light arches.. Proportions in line with Renaissance art/science of proportions

flashcard

Page 12: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Detail of Terra Cotta Medallion, 1487

Foundling Hospital, Florence

Andrea della Robbia

Family secret blue and white glazing - babies show human side of Renaissance humanism

Guild public service

flashcard

Page 13: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Alberti’s Della Pittura & perspective

• Alberti wrote a treatise (3 books) on perspective and art.

• Half of one book dealt with geometry and mathematical perspective as pioneered by Brunelleschi- making a painting as a “view through a window” (p 622 in text)

• The other books dealt with composition, theme, philsophy, and technique

Page 14: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Church of Sant’Andrea, Mantua, 1470

Leon Battista Alberti

Who also wrote the treatise on perspective, art, etc.

Page 15: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Trinity with the Virgin, St. John the Evangelist, and Donors

Masacccio, 1425

Masterpiece of perspective - 1st true painting with linear perspective

Illusino of reality

You can see the grids and perspective lines where he laid strings in the plaster

http://luxmedia.vo.llnwd.net/o10/clients/nationalgallery/illusion/02_trinity.m4v

flashcard

Page 16: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Expulsion from Paradise, fresco, (adam and Eve), 1427, Masaccio

From the Brancacci Chapel

Study of anatomy & underlying muscle and bone structure, combined with expressivism and emotions of Adam & Even upon being cast out of Eden

More psychological than Flemish painters

Inspired by ancient Roman sculpture

flashcard

Page 17: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Masaccio, 1427

Adam, Eve from Ghent Altarpiece, Van Eyck, 1437

Page 18: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

View of Frescoes by Masaccio & Masolino & Lippi (collaboration in Brancacci Chapel in Florence). Unfortunately Masaccio died in 1428 or 1429 before completing his part of the fresco.

Page 19: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Tribute Money, Masaccio, 1427, fresco, Brancacci chapel. flashcard

Most innovative of early early Italian Renaissance painters..3 scenes w/in one setting, Peter catches a fish with a gold coin in its mouth to pay Caesar’s taxes on the right, central figures around Jesus where Jesus tells them to Render unto Caesar that which is Caesar’s (Florentines being taxed for military campaign at the time of this painting).

Integrates architecture, figures, and landscapes realistically w/perspective

Green robe shaded w/red, strong modeling of figures, consistent light source..this fresco was studied by Michelangelo.

Page 20: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Annunciation, Fra Angeliao, fresco, 1438-45. Painted for a monastery in Florence. Probably commissioned by Cosimo de’ Medici. Linear perspective, natural light. Part of a series painted in the monastery to help guide the monks’ prayers. Columns here show new buliding technique used by Brunelleschi.flashcard

Page 21: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

The Last Supper, Andrea del Castagno, 1447. Fresco.

Page 22: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Art & Humanism: Human Form

• Artists in Italy became interested in portraying the human form as accurately as possible

• Scientists such as Galileo (imprisoned for life by the Spanish Inquisition) promoted the study of nature and reality in physics, mathematics, and biology

Page 23: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Battle of the Nudes, Antonio del Pollaiuolo, Engraving, 1465 - study of anatomy

Page 24: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Hercules & Antaeus, bronze figurine, 18” tall, del Pollaiuolo, c. 1475 (early Renaissance)

Influence of classical Greek & Roman sculpture

Study of Anatomy

Patrons: smaller statues that could be enjoyed or placed in the homes of middle class families

Del Pollaiulo’s patron was the Medici family; he was trained as a painter, sculptor, and goldsmith

flashcard

Page 25: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Gates of Paradise, (east doors), Baptistry of San Giovanni, Florence, Ghiberti 1425-52, bronze, 15’ high (4.5 meters)

Flashcard“I strove to imitate nature as clearly as I could, and with all he perspective I could produce, to have excellent compositions with many figures.”

Competition held in 1401 to commission this prestigious set of doors… Brunelleschi & Ghiberti were top competitors

Patron: Wool Mfgrs. Guild

Name coined later by Michelangelo

1 point perspective, 10 old testament scenes

Technological advance from earlier doors-revived LOST WAX method of relief sculpture

Page 26: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Jacob & Esau, panel from the Gates of Paradise, Ghiberti 1435

Intuitive and linear perspective, high and low relief figures give amazing sense of depth

Jacob & Esau story from Genesis in Bible

Esau symbolizes Jews and Jacob ChristiansFlashcard part 2

Page 27: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Ghiberti’s Gates of Paradise, 1425Pisano’s John the Baptist doors, 1327

Page 28: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Donatello - New Expressiveness

• Excelled in 3 areas:– Human emotions & expressions– Vision & insight in solving formal

problems– Technical skill in various sculpture

media• 1st life-size male nude since antiquity• 1st life-size equestrian statue since

antiquity• Used contrapossto, iconography, G-R

drapery

Page 29: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

David, Donatello, Bronze, 5’2”, 1446-60, early Italian Renaissance

1st life-size male nude statue since antituity

David shown standing on the head of Goliath

Exagerrated contrapossto position

Hat of a fashionable Renaissance young man; David shown as adolescent

Originally stood in courtyard of Medici palace-Medici were patrons of Donatello

Inscription suggests iconography symbolizing the victory of Florence over Milan in 1428

“The victor is whoever defends the fatherland. Al-powerful God crushes the angry enemy. Behold, a boy overcomes the great tyrant. Conquer, O citizens!”

Page 30: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Gattamelata (Equestrian Monument of Erasmo da Narni), Donatello, Bronze, about 12 feet high, 1443

1st life size bronze equestrian statue since antiquity

Shows General of Venetian army

Self-made man of the Renaissance, powerful condottieri

Sources: Marcus Aurelius & another ancient Roman equestrian statues.

Donatello stayed in Padua (northern Italy) for years and founded a school of sculpture.

flashcard

Page 31: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Mary Magdalen, Donatello, wood, 6’ tall, 1450s

Extremely expressive statue of the saint, who became a hermit after Jesus’ death.

Shows her emaciated and aged, clothed in her own hair, after years of wandering in the wilderness.

Donatello rejected classical form in this figure.

Vision of the hereafter.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ekkOfn002tI&feature=PlayList&p=6F27851475601E03&index=9

Page 32: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Andrea del Verrochio followed with this statue in the late 15th century.

Bartolomeo Colleoni, General of Venice is portrayed here.

Vitality and energy; image of will and domination in this portrait of a condolietteri.

Page 33: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Artistic innovations spread from Florence throughout Italy

• Artists got ideas, inspiration, & training from Florence artists Brunelleschi, Donatello, and Masaccio and these ideas spread thru Italy

• Venice & Urbino also became artistic centers in last half of 15th century

• Della Francesca (Urbino), Mantegna (Mantua), and the Bellini brothers (Venice) are 4 artists from these areas where Florentine art spread.

Page 34: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Recognition & Proving of the True Cross, Piero della Francesca painted this fresco in the 1450s. Brought from Florence to Urbino by powerful patron Federico da Montefeltro. Used linear perspective & simplified geometric forms. Façade in background mimics Alberti’s. Della Francesca wrote about geometry and art in a book. Part of a cycle of frescoes in this church about the true cross of Jesus.

Page 35: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Battista Sforza & Federico da Montefeltro, oil on wood, 1474. Piero della Francesca painted this dual portrait of the Duke of Urbino & his wife Battista. flashcard

Flemish influence seen in oil paint & luminous colors; also landscape background.

Strict profile tradition makes subjects seem distant from viewers

Painting on reverse side shows humanistic interests of Montefeltro’s court and is full of iconography.

Page 36: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Reverse side of dual portrait by della Francesca,

Triumph of Federico and Battista

Duke is crowned by a winged Goddess (either Victory or Fortune); also shown are Justice, Prudence, Fortitude, and Temperance. Battista’s cart is pulled by a Cherub and driving a team of unicorns.. Faith & Charity hold a pelican, symbol of maternal sacrifices.Inscriptions praise Battista’s restraint and virtues, and

Federico’s moderation and fame.

Page 37: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Camera Picta (Newlywed Ceiling), Andrea Mantegna, fresco, 1465-74, Mantua.

Flashcard

Mantegna studied in Padua with influence of Donatello.

Patron was the Gonzaga family, painted this for their palace ceiling.

False oculus, trompe l’oeil effect.

Di sotto in su… Shows radical perspective views and foreshortening.

BEGAN LONG TRADITION OF ILLUSIONISTIC CEILING PAINTING.

Interested in classical literature & archaeology.

Page 38: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

In Venice, the Bellini brothers created many OIL paintings inspired by the Flemish

Procession of the Relic of the True Cross before the Church of St. Mark, Gentile Bellini, oil on canvas, 1496, Galleria dell’ Accademia, Venice. Narrative of annual festival celebrating a 1444 miracle recovery of a dying child. Father in red robe kneeling is praying for his child’s recovery. perspective

Page 39: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Virgin & Child Enthroned, 1478, Giovanni Bellini, Hospital of San Giobbe, Venice

Sacra conversacione (know this term): sacred conversation between Mary, saints, angels, and donors as shown in this type of piece. In real life of course they are not conversing (from different times and places) but joined in mystical communion outside of time.

Page 40: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

St. Francis in Ecstasyoil

1470s

Bellini

Page 41: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Back in Florence late 15th century…

• Love of material opulence and interest in nature• Poetic, mystical spirit & religious fervor. • Philosophical circles around the Medici.• Monk Savoronala preached against religious images

and destroyed many paintings.• Ghirlandio & Botticelli 2 painters from this time

frame. • Botticelli studied under Verrochio, revived the female

nude, and painted in a linear style with floating figures. Did 3/4 profile portraits (like Van Eyck)

Page 42: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Primavera, Sandro Botticelli, 1482, Florence. Tempera on wood. Allegory combining Christianity with classical stories, Venus of Earth, Venus of Heaven. Orange trees mean fertility. Revived female nude in art. Figures seem to float. Secular painting of religious subject made for Lorenzo Medici’s wedding. Inspired by Flemish tapestry. flashcard

Page 43: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Birth of Venus, Botticelli, tempera, 1484. Flashcard. Based on modest Venus classic statue, philosophy of beauty=birth of beauty. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r5L-B_fW7Ow

Page 44: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Mystic Nativity, Botticelli, 1500.

Painted to show the end of the world .. At time many though world was going to end in 1500.

Cave stable like Byzantine church, timber shed more Western.

Philosophers are struggling with angels at the bottom… showing the struggle between science and faith at the time??

Inscription references Book of Revelations in Bible.

Page 45: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Ghirlandio

Painted frescos in Sassetti chapel in Florence

Showed poetic, mystical spirit

Religious fervor at end of 15th century

Page 46: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Nativity and Adoration of the Shepherds, Sassetti Chapel Altarpiece, Florence, Ghirlandaio, 1485. flashcard

Ghirlandaio painted this after viewing van der Goes’ altarpiece, which came to Florence from Bruges in 1483.

He even copies some of Hugo’s flowers, the iris, and has Jesus on the ground. However, he puts in classical Roman pilasters instead of a medieval setting. Linear & aerial perspective.

Page 47: Early Renaissance in Italy Rebirth of Classical Ideals, Southern Style

Ghirlandaio’s Nativity

Hugo van der Goes’ Portinari Altarpiece