Chapter 13 Euro Society in the Age of the Renaissance 1350 - 1550 Art is probably the most well known aspect of the Ren. Patronage ◦ Given by guilds & rel. confraternities Commissioned Il Duomo Brunelleschi’s dome – Florentine Cathedral Ghiberti’s baptistery doors Michelangelo’s David ◦ Later – wealthy merchants, bankers, signori or oligarchs Medici (oligarchs) glorified themselves and their position Vast sums spent for the arts reveal changes Elaborately decorated private chapels 1st in churches then w/n palaces – became the center of wealthy families’ religious life Knights now purchased art and hired mercenaries to fulfill their military needs Brunelleschi, Dome of Cathedral Filipo Brunelleschi, the foremost architect of the early Renaissance, lost the competition for the commission for the north door of the Baptistery to Ghiberti. In 1417 he bested Ghiberti, and won the commission to build a dome for the Florentine Cathedral. Between 1420 and 1436 he built a drum, a vertical supporting wall, on the existing 138-foot-diameter octagonal cross of the cathedral. He then assembled the dome on the drum, essentially creating an eight-sided Gothic vault. (Scala/Art Resource, NY) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Ghiberti, Gates Lorenzo Ghiberti (1378-1455) was given a commission to cast a pair of doors, with scenes drawn from the Old Testament, for the east side of the Baptistery of San Giovanni, Florence--thereafter known as The Gates of Paradise, so named by Michelangelo. In creating the ten 31-inch-square panels, Ghiberti's use of perspective is one of the hallmarks of his accomplishment. (Scala/Art Resource, NY) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Michelangelo, David The concept of genius as divine inspiration is nowhere exemplified more fully than in the life and work of Michelangelo Buonarrotti (14751564). And Michelangelo was a sculptor--more specifically, a carver of marble statues-to the core. His David is the earliest monumental statue of the High Renaissance, and the city fathers eventually chose to put it in front of the Palazzo Vecchio, as the civic-patriotic symbol of the Florentine republic. Michelangelo fashioned the marble in a new, more natural manner. David's bare skin contrasts with the rough leather strap of the slingshot, and his right leg leans against a realistic tree trunk. He blends the classical model of a victorious athlete crowned with a laurel wreath with the biblical hero as a defender of the faith. David is a mature young man of consummate beauty. (Scala/Art Resource, NY) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Most of Ren art was religious, in a secular context ◦ Historical figures depicted in contemporary dress ◦ New genres Portrait painting Mixed realism and idealized landscapes, Secular Humanist views of wealthy families Patrons had themselves put into historical or religious themes Anguissola, Portrait of Artist's Three Sisters Sofonisba Anguissola (ca. 1535-1625) was the first Italian woman to be widely recognized as an artist during her lifetime. Because women were not permitted to study anatomy, Sofonisba specialized in portrait paintings, infusing them with psychological truth about human emotions. In her painting Portrait of the Artist's Three Sisters with Their Governess, the scene is a suspended moment in time: as the governess looks on, the oldest sister is poised to make her next move, while the youngest sister smiles mischievously as she anticipates her other sister's countermove. (Narodowe Museum, Poznan, Poland/The Bridgeman Art Library International) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Journey of the Magi Few Renaissance paintings better illustrate art in the service of the princely court than this painting by Benozzo Gozzoli (1420-1497), The Magi on their way to Bethlehem with Lorenzo the Magnificent, which was commissioned by Piero de'Medici to adorn his palace chapel. Everything in this fresco--the large crowd, the feathers and diamonds adorning many of the personages, the black servant in front-serves to flaunt the power and wealth of the House of Medici. The artist has discreetly placed himself in the crowd; the name Benozzo is embroidered on his cap. (Scala/Art Resource, NY) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Giotto – Florentine painter early 14thC ◦ Spearheaded realism Piero della Francesca & Andrea Mantegna ◦ Developed the technique of perspective 3-D in 2-D Masaccio – died 1428 ◦ Revolutionized pointing by emphasizing the narrative element & brilliantly using light and dark Leonardo da Vinci ◦ The Last Supper Portrayed tensions between Christ and his disciples Giotto, Scrovegni Chapel Art historians credit Giotto di Bondone (1266-1337) with having revolutionized the course of painting in Europe. In 1305-1306 he executed his masterpiece--the design for the Arena (Scrovegni) Chapel in Padua, which was commissioned by Enrico Scrovegni, a wealthy merchant. The thirty-nine frescoes, which cover the walls and the ceiling of the chapel in three tiers, were designed by Giotto as a series of three narratives to be read from the center, then down and clockwise. (Scala/Art Resource, NY) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Giotto, Lamentation The somber tragedy of Giotto's Lamentation, from the third row of frescoes in the Arena (Scrovegni) Chapel, Padua, illustrates his compositional precision and his authority in the production of the human drama played out at Christ's crucifixion. The figures grieve in a manner consistent with each personality--Mary serenely holds Jesus's head, while anonymous mourners cradle his pierced hands and feet. Angels weep from the clouds, and John, Jesus's beloved disciple, stands above Mary and cries most conspicuously. The overall unity of the scene is achieved by the diagonal slope of the hill, which moves from the upper right of the fresco to focus on Mary and her son. The serenity of the brushwork further enhances the image of the necessity of Christ's sacrifice. (Alinari/Art Resource, NY) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Mantegna, Adoration of Magi Applying his study of ancient Roman relief sculpture, and elaborating on a famous scriptural text, Andrea Mantegna painted this scene of the Three Kings coming to recognize the divinity of Christ--Adoration of the Magi (ca. 1495-1505)-for the private devotion of the Gonzaga family of Mantua. The Three Kings represent the entire world as it was known to medieval Europeans: the three continents of Europe, Asia, and Africa. They also symbolize the three stages of life: youth, maturity, and old age. Here Melchior, the oldest, his large cranium symbolizing wisdom, personifies Europe. He offers gold in a Chinese porcelain cup from the Ming Dynasty. Balthazar, with an olive complexion and dark beard, stands for Asia and maturity. He presents frankincense in a stunning vessel of Turkish tombac ware. Caspar, representing Africa and youth, gives myrrh in an urn of striped marble. The child responds with a blessing. The black background brings out the rich colors. (The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Masaccio, Holy Trinity The new style of early Renaissance painting was launched by a young genius, Masaccio (1401-1428), who was only 21 when he created The Holy Trinity in 1425 for the church Santa Maria Novella in Florence. The crucified Christ is within the arch, and God the Father is behind and above him. The Holy Spirit is represented by the descending white dove, just above the head of Christ. (Scala/Art Resource, NY) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Masaccio, Tribute Money Masaccio's Tribute Money was commissioned in 1427 by the Brancacci family to ornament their chapel in the church of Santa Maria del Carmine in Florence. Vasari describes this fresco as "the most notable of all" of Masaccio's works. Although the fresco has a biblical theme--Peter's confrontation with the tax collector and Jesus telling Peter to catch a fish--Masaccio portrays the story in a naturalized setting, containing real people who are solid in form, with detailed bones and muscles, and whose expressions exude energy. The sculptural modeling of the human form is accomplished through the use of light and shadow. Other Renaissance painters emulated Masaccio's creative use of light. Masaccio used both linear perspective, where parallel lines recede into the painting and meet at a vanishing point in the distance, and aerial perspective in this painting. (Scala/Art Resource, NY) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. da Vinci, The Last Supper The works of Leonardo da Vinci--drawings, paintings, sculpture, innumerable inventions, and copious writings--exemplify the Renaissance spirit. He is, however, best known as the founder of a new style of painting. Leonardo developed two important design techniques that became standard features of High Renaissance painting. The first, circular motion, placed figures in a group so that each seemed to be leaning toward, looking at, or pointing to another figure. The second, pyramidal design, positioned one figure as if at the apex of an imaginary pyramid and then allowed the other figures to fix the corners of the pyramid. His most famous work in Milan is a mural, The Last Supper. The perspective is straightforward, with the vanishing point located immediately behind Jesus' head. The grouping of the disciples in four groups of three is equally unique. (Scala/Art Resource, NY) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Donatello ◦ Sculpture Revived the classical figure and the classical nude Freestanding Balanced Emotionally expressive Brunelleschi ◦ Architecture Foundling Hospital – 1st truly Ren building Rounded, Roman-style Successfully building the 1st dome – Il Duomo Donatello, David Sculpture in Florence during the early Renaissance took a new turn with the work of Donatello (ca. 1386-1466), who sculpted the first freestanding nude figures since antiquity. He rendered his bronze statue of David quite unheroically. It derives its exceptional quality from the modeling of the subject's body and his contrapposto stance--a pose between walking and resting, in which the weight of the body rests on foot. During both the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, David's triumph over Goliath was a symbol of Christ's victory over sin, death, and the law; and David's nudity symbolized the soul being exposed before God. (Scala/Art Resource, NY) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Northern Eur. ◦ Tended to be more religious Flemish painters – love for detail, realism & human personality Rogier van der Weyden Jan van Eyck Giobanni Arnolfini and his Bride – admired greatly in Italy Rogier van der Weyden, Deposition Rogier van der Weyden (ca. 1399-1464) was another great master of early Flemish painting. He set himself the important task of recapturing, within the framework of the new style created by his predecessors, the emotional drama and pathos of the Gothic past. Taking as his subject the suffering and death of Jesus, a popular theme of Netherlandish piety, van der Weyden describes (in an inverted "T") Christ's descent from the cross, surrounded by nine sorrowing figures. The appreciation of the human anatomy, the rich fabrics of the clothes, and the pierced and bloody hands of Jesus were all intended to touch the viewers' Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. emotions. (Scala/Art Resource, NY)= Hubert/Jan van Eyck, Ghent Altarpiece One of the most renowned works in the history of Flemish art is the Ghent Altarpiece, which Hubert and Jan van Eyck executed for Saint Bavon Cathedral in Ghent. They created the altarpiece in the customary triptych--a central panel with two hinged side arms. In the upper portion of the central panel are the monumental figures of Jesus, Mary, and John the Baptist. On the far left are Adam and Eve, the earliest known nudes in northern panel painting, and the dignity of their natural forms is in direct contrast to the scenes of evil immediately above them-the sacrifice of Cain and Abel. By establishing a direct relationship between the subject and the viewer (whose position is just beneath the figures), the van Eycks connected real space to pictorial space. (Giraudon/The Bridgeman Art Library International) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Jan van Eyck, Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife The founders of the northern school of Flemish painting were the two van Eyck brothers, Hubert and Jan (ca. 1390-1441), whose work marks a definitive break from the Middle Ages. They paid attention to minute details, and their technical artistry is particularly evident in their depiction of textures. Jan van Eyck's most famous painting, Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife, is also filled with symbolism. The room of the bride's house in which the marriage takes place is filled with objects alluding to Netherlandish marriage customs; the little dog, symbolizing fidelity, completes the allegorical scene. Perhaps the most fascinating portion of the painting is the convex mirror, which not only reflects the bridal couple but the artist himself, and the inscription on the back wall, which reads "Johannes de Eyck fuit hic 1434" (Jan van Eyck was here). (Reproduced by Courtesy of the Trustees, The National Gallery, London) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Greatest masterpieces ◦ Michelangelo Sistine Chapel Pieta Dome of St Peter’s ◦ Raphael School of Athens ◦ Titian Style of mannerism Figures & musculature were often exaggerated Colors heightened to intensify emotionality Michelangelo, Sistine Chapel ceiling Michelangelo Buonarroti's commission to adorn the vaults of the 130-foot-long ceiling of the Sistine Chapel was the most challenging enterprise of the Renaissance. Although Michelangelo had to adapt his monumental figures to fit the contours of the ceiling, they remain highly expressive and communicate his belief that physical beauty manifested the spiritual beauty of the soul. The nine central panels portray the world described in Genesis from Creation to the Drunkenness of Noah. In the sections above the windows and in the lunettes around the windows, Michelangelo portrayed the generations of ancestors prior to Christ, and in the large corners of the chapel he depicts important scenes drawn from the Old Testament. (Vatican Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Museum) Leonardo da Vinci ◦ Geniuses – many feel in history Mona Lisa Last Supper ◦ Renaissance Man Scholar Deeply interested in anatomy Drew everything he saw or imagined Plans for inventions – realized centuries later Helicopter Tank Designer weapons & fortresses Water systems for the Sforza duke of Milan Artist Experimented with perspective New materials for painting Kept extensive notebooks Leonardo da Vinci, Mona Lisa In 1503 Leonardo da Vinci began his most famous work--the Mona Lisa. The subject of the painting is Lisa Gherardini del Giocondo, the wife of a prominent Florentine businessman. She is posed half-length in the seated position, her posture is relaxed, and her gaze is direct. The softening of the edges of the background, effecting a fine haze called sfumato, creates a sense of intimacy and psychological drama. (Erich Lessing/Art Resource, NY) Copyright ©Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Michelangelo’s David, the most famous sculpture of the Ren, is often considered an expression of Platonic idealism. Both David and Pico’s work in philosophy exalt man in all his glory. David – commissioned for the town hall, also expressed civic pride. Almost all was produced on commission ◦ Most patrons paid their artists well da Vinci earned huge sums ◦ Social status Medieval period – craftsmen Ren – highly honored, geniuses, occasionally called divine (Michelangelo) Ren artists signed their works no men from common or artisan background ◦ Women Marginalized No architects 1 sculptor Several painters Women's arts Embroidery The few women painters were daughters of artists or nobles Not allowed to study or paint the male nude Not allowed to learn the art of fresco Artemisia Gentileschi Biblical & mythological heroines: Jewish heroines Ester and Judith The life and work of Artemseia Gentileschi showed the intersection of gender issues and art. She was the daughter of a well-known artist, Orazio Gentileschi, who encouraged and trained her & she ended up having quite a successful career. She was the center of a famous trial, in which she accused her art teacher of rape and was herself treated badly. There was a recent feature film about her that is not reliable in its interpretation.