Renaissance & Baroque

ARTS 1304, Unit 1

Late Medieval & Early Renaissance Northern Europe

Northern Europe in 1477 CE

Northern Europe in 1477 CE

  • The significance of manuscript illustration.

  • The differences between Tempera & Oil paintings.

  • The heightened used materiality & emotion and the reasoning behind it.

Topics to Cover:

Manuscript Illustration

A View into the Value of Medieval Manuscripts

St. Matthew, from The Lindisfarne Gospels

c. 700 CE
Colors & ink on vellum/parchment

Reproduced Pages from The Lindisfarne Gospels

Reproduced 'Carpet Page' from The Lindisfarne Gospels

LIMBOURG BROTHERS

January, from Le Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry

1413-1416 CE
Colors & ink on vellum/parchment

LIMBOURG BROTHERS

October, from Le Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry

1413-1416 CE
Colors & ink on vellum/parchment

An Example of the Secrets within Medieval Manuscripts

Tempera vs. Oil Painting

ROBERT CAMPIN

Merode Altarpiece (open)

c. 1425-1428 CE | Oil on wood

GIOTTO DI BONDONE

Madonna Enthroned, from the Church of Ognissanti

Florence, Italy, ca. 1310
Tempera & gold leaf on wood, 10’ 8” x 6’ 8”  

Tempera & Oil Paint Demonstration

Materiality & Emotion

ROGIER VAN DER WEYDEN

The Descent from the Cross

1435-1442 CE | Oil on wood

PIERO DELLA FRANCESCA

Flagellation of Christ

c. 1455-1460 CE | Oil & tempera on panel

Quattrocento Italy

Renaissance Florence

Renaissance Florence

  • Humanism revisited.

  • The artistic achievements of Donatello, Brunelleschi, & Masaccio

  • The Medici & Neoplatonism

Topics to Cover:

Humanism Revisited

  • Classical Language
  • Literature
  • History
  • Philosophy

Petrarch

All other things have a limited and fixed nature prescribed and bounded by our laws.

You, with no limit or no bound, may choose for yourself the limits and bounds of your nature.

We have placed you at the world’s center so that you may survey everything else in the world.

We have made you neither of heavenly nor of earthly stuff, neither mortal nor immortal, so that with free choice and dignity, you may fashion yourself into whatever form you choose.

- Giovanni della Pico Mirandola
[Oration on the Dignity of Man]

Donatello, Brunelleschi, & Masaccio

DONATELLO

Saint George, or San Michele

Florence, Italy, c. 1410-1415 CE
Marble, 6’10” high

DONATELLO

David

Florence, Italy, late 1440–1460 CE
Bronze, 5’ 2-1/4” high

ANDREA DEL VERROCCHIO

David

Florence, Italy, c. 1465–1470 CE
Bronze, 4’ 1 1/2” high

Doryphoros (a.k.a. Spear Bearer)

by Polykleitos, c. 440 BCE

St. George

by Donatello

David

by Donatello

David

by Verrochio

FILIPPO BRUNELLESCHI

Florence Cathedral Dome

1420-1436

Brunelleschi's Dome

FILIPPO BRUNELLESCHI

interior (looking east) of San Lorenzo

Florence, Italy, c. 1421–1469

FILIPPO BRUNELLESCHI

interior of Santo Spirito (looking northeast)

Florence, Italy, 1434–1436; begun c. 1436

FILIPPO BRUNELLESCHI

Facade of the Pazzi Chapel, Santa Croce

Florence, Italy, begun c. 1440

PIERO DELLA FRANCESCA

Flagellation of Christ

c. 1455-1465 CE | Oil and tempera on wood, 1’ 11-1/8” X 2’ 8-1/4”

MASACCIO

Tribute Money

Brancacci Chapel, Santa Maria del Carmine, Florence, Italy, c. 1427 CE | Fresco, 8’ 4-1/8” x 19’ 7-1/8”

Berlinghiero Berlinghieri

Madonna and child

c. 1230 CE
Tempera on wood

PERUGINO

Christ Delivering the Keys of the Kingdom to Saint Peter

Sistine Chapel, Vatican, Rome, Italy, 1481–1483 CE | Fresco, 11’ 5 1/2” x 18’ 8 1/2”

The Medici
& Neoplatonism

Meet the Medici Family

Medici of Ottajano

Medici Coat of Arms

Coat of Arms of the Medici Popes

Giuliano de' Medici di Ottajano

Pope Leo X

Giovanni

Cosimo

Lorenzo

Founder of the Medici Bank

First de facto ruler of Florence

Ardent supporter of the arts & humanist ideals

The Importance of City Life

Piazza della Repubblica

Piazza della Signoria

Piazza Santa Maria Novella

Piazza Santa Croce

The Proliferation of Artists

Art, Sex, Beauty, & Love (Neoplatonism)

SANDRO BOTTICELLI

Birth of Venus

c. 1484–1486 | Tempera on canvas, approx. 5’ 9” x 9’ 2”

Often I have woken to myself out of the body, become detached from all else and entered into myself; and I have seen beauty of surpassing greatness, and have felt assured that then especially I belonged to the higher reality, engaged in the noblest life and identified with the Divine.

- Plotinus [Enneads, iv.8]

Platonic Forms

SANDRO BOTTICELLI

Birth of Venus

c. 1484–1486 | Tempera on canvas, approx. 5’ 9” x 9’ 2”

Why the Medici Matter Today

Cinquecento Italy

Italy 1494 CE

  • The architecture & painting of Michelangelo

  • The significance of Raphael's work at the Vatican

  • Leonardo and the rise of the celebrity artist

Topics to Cover:

The Architecture & Painting of Michelangelo

MICHELANGELO BUONARROTI

Interior and ceiling of the Sistine Chapel

Vatican City, Rome, Italy, 1508-1512
Fresco, 128’ X 45’.

Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel

Vatican City, Rome, Italy, 1508-1512
Fresco, 128’ x 45’

MICHELANGELO BUONARROTI

Creation of Adam detail of the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel

Vatican City, Rome, Italy, 1511–1512 | Fresco, 9’ 2” x 18’ 8”

MICHELANGELO BUONARROTI

Last Judgment, altar wall of the Sistine Chapel

Vatican City, Rome, Italy, 1536–1541
Fresco, 48’ x 44’

MICHELANGELO BUONARROTI

Saint Peter’s (looking northeast)

Vatican City, Rome, Italy, 1546–1564

 

Dome completed by GIACOMO DELLA PORTA, 1590

Old St. Peter's as Commissioned by Emperor Constantine

ANDREA PALLADIO

Villa Rotonda (formerly Villa Capra)

near Vicenza, Italy, c. 1566–1570 CE

Michelangelo's design for St. Peter's, for comparison

MICHELANGELO BUONARROTI

Pieta
c. 1498-1500 CE | Marble, 5’ 8-1/2” high

MICHELANGELO BUONARROTI

David

Florence, Italy, 1501–1504
Marble, 17’ high

David & the Importance of Setting

Raphael's Work at the Vatican

RAPHAEL

Marriage of the Virgin

San Francesco, Città di Castello, Italy, 1504
Oil on wood, 5’ 7” x 3’ 10 1/2”

RAPHAEL

Pope Leo X with Cardinals Giulio de’ Medici and Luigi de’ Rossi

c. 1517
Oil on wood, 5’ 5/8” X 3’ 10 7’8”.

RAPHAEL

Philosophy (School of Athens)

Stanza della Segnatura, Vatican Palace, Rome, Italy, 1509–1511 | Fresco, 19’ x 27’.

Leonardo & the Rise of the Celebrity Artist

LEONARDO DA VINCI

Mona Lisa

c. 1503–1505 CE
Oil on wood, 2’ 6 1/4” x 1’ 9”

How the Mona Lisa Became a Cultural Icon

LEONARDO DA VINCI

Madonna of the Rocks

San Francesco Grande, Milan, Italy, begun 1483
Oil on wood (transferred to canvas), 6’ 6 1/2” x 4’

London Version, c. 1500 CE

LEONARDO DA VINCI

cartoon for Madonna and Child with Saint Anne and the Infant Saint John

ca. 1505–1507
Charcoal heightened with white on brown paper, 4’ 6” x 3’ 3”

LEONARDO DA VINCI

Vitruvian Man

c. 1485–1490
Pen and ink on paper, 1’ 1 1/2" X 9 5/8”.

LEONARDO DA VINCI

The Fetus and Lining of the Uterus

c. 1511–1513
Ink wash, over red chalk and traces of black chalk on paper, 1’ 8 5/8”.

LEONARDO DA VINCI

Last Supper

Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan, c. 1495–1498 CE | Oil and tempera on plaster, 13’ 9” x 29’ 10”

Considering the Reality of "Genius"

High Renaissance & Mannerism in
N. Europe & Spain

Europe in the Early 16th Century

  • The impact of the Protestant Reformation

  • Albrecht Dürer's German perspective on the Renaissance

  • Landscape painting in the Netherlands
  • El Greco, spirituality, and cross-cultural influences

Topics to Cover:

The Impact of the Protestant Reformation

Martin Luther

Born: November 10, 1483
Died: February 18, 1546

Overview of Protestantism

Catholic Faith

Protestant Faith

Albrecht Dürer's German Perspective
on the Renaissance

The Quintessential German Artist

ALBRECHT DÜRER

Great Piece of Turf

1503 CE
Watercolor, 1’ 3/4” x 1’ 3/8”

ALBRECHT DÜRER

The Fall of Man (Adam and Eve)

1504 CE
Engraving, 9 7/8” x 7 5/8”.

ALBRECHT DÜRER

Knight, Death, and the Devil

1513 CE
Engraving, 9 5/8” x 7 3/8”

ALBRECHT DÜRER

Four Apostles

1526 CE
Oil on wood, each panel 7’ 1” x 2’ 6”

ALBRECHT DÜRER

Self-Portrait at the Age of 13

1484 CE
Silverpoint, 10.8" x 7.7”

ALBRECHT DÜRER

Portrait of the Artist Holding a Thistle

1493 CE
Oil on parchment on canvas, 22" x 17.3”

ALBRECHT DÜRER

Self-Portrait at 26

1498 CE
Oil on panel, 20.5" x 16"

ALBRECHT DÜRER

Self-Portrait

1500 CE
Oil on panel, 26.25” X 19.25”

Landscape Painting
in the Netherlands

JOACHIM PATINIR

Landscape with Saint Jerome

c. 1520–1524 CE | Oil on wood, 2’ 5 1/8” x 2’ 11 7/8”

PIETER BRUEGEL THE ELDER

Netherlandish Proverbs

1559 CE | Oil on wood, 3’ 10” x 5’ 4 1/8”.

PIETER BRUEGEL THE ELDER

Hunters in the Snow

1565 CE | Oil on wood, approx. 3’ 10 1/8” x 5’ 3 3/4”. 

PIETER BRUEGEL THE ELDER

Fall of Icarus

c. 1555–1556 CE | Oil on wood transferred to canvas, 2’ 5” X 3’ 8 1/8”.

Note the Different Perspective Techniques

El Greco, Spirituality, & Cross-Cultural Influences

El Greco's Spirituality

JOACHIM PATINIR

Comnenus Mosaic

1122 CE | Mosaic

EL GRECO

St. Francis & Brother Leo in Meditation

c. 1600 CE
Oil on canvas

EL GRECO

View of Toledo

c. 1610 CE
Oil on canvas, 3’ 11-3/4" X 3’ 6-3/4"

EL GRECO

The Burial of Count Orgaz

1586 CE
Oil on canvas, 16’ x 12’

The Baroque in Italy

Important Structures within Vatican City

  • Caravaggio's intense and dramatic career.

  • The rivalry between Borromini & Bernini.

Topics to Cover:

Caravaggio:
The Rock Star of Baroque Italy

The Rough Streets of Caravaggio's Rome

CARAVAGGIO

Musicians

c. 1595 CE | Oil on canvas,

CARAVAGGIO

Conversion of Saint Paul

c. 1601 CE
Oil on canvas

Caravaggio's Big Idea

CARAVAGGIO

Calling of Saint Matthew

c. 1601 CE
Oil on canvas

Mathematical Beauty via Francesco Borromini

FRANCESCO BORROMINI

Two views of the facade of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane, Rome, Italy

1665–1676 CE

FRANCESCO BORROMINI

Interior of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane (looking northwest and up into the dome), Rome, Italy

1638-1641 CE

FRANCESCO BORROMINI

View of dome from below of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane, Rome, Italy

1638–1641 CE

Borromini the Mathematician

FRANCESCO BORROMINI

Plan of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane, Rome, Italy

1638–1641 CE

FRANCESCO BORROMINI

Chapel of Saint Ivo
College of the Sapienza, Rome, Italy

begun 1642.

FRANCESCO BORROMINI

Chapel of Saint Ivo (view into dome), College of the Sapienza, Rome, Italy

begun 1642 CE

FRANCESCO BORROMINI, plan of the Chapel of Saint Ivo, College of the Sapienza, Rome, Italy, begun 1642

Gianlorenzo Bernini's Rage

Introducing: Bernini

GIANLORENZO BERNINI

David

1623 CE
Marble

GIANLORENZO BERNINI

Apollo and Daphne

1623–1624 CE
Marble

MICHELANGELO BUONARROTI

Saint Peter’s (looking northeast)
Vatican City, Rome, Italy

1546–1564 CE

 

Dome completed by GIACOMO DELLA PORTA, 1590

CARLO MADERNO

Facade of Saint Peter’s, Vatican City, Rome, Italy

1606–1612 CE

Nave renovations made c. 1607-15615 CE

GIANLORENZO BERNINI

Baldacchino
Saint Peter’s, Vatican City, Rome, Italy

1624–1633 CE
Gilded bronze, 100’ high.

Plans for the Bernini Towers

Bernini's Rage Nearly Destroys Him

Towers demolished by 1642

GIANLORENZO BERNINI

Fountain of the Four Rivers
Piazza Navona, Rome, Italy

1648–1651 CE
Travertine and marble figures, granite obelisk

GIANLORENZO BERNINI

Ecstasy of Saint Teresa
Cornaro Chapel, Santa Maria della Vittoria, Rome, Italy

1645–1652 CE

Marble

GIANLORENZO BERNINI

Inerior of the Cornaro Chapel, Santa Maria della vittoria, Rome, Italy

1645-1652 CE

GIANLORENZO BERNINI

Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City, Italy

 1656-1667 CE

Original design of St. Peter's, c. 4th cent. CE

End
of
Unit 1

ARTS 1304: Unit 1, Renaissance & Baroque

By Jonathan Morgan

ARTS 1304: Unit 1, Renaissance & Baroque

ARTS 1304, Lone Star College, Prof. Morgan | Updated Fall 2024

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