Title: Architecture in France
1The Baroque Era
2Baroque Architecture
- Proportional but extravagant
- Fancy and pretty details
- A lot of columns, arches, domes and rounded
shapes - The scroll is especially baroque (like
a cinnamon roll swirl)
3Architecture of Baroque
- Luxurious chateaux
- Decorative motifs of Italian Renaissance
- Love of and emphasis on decoration
- Graceful, harmonious
4 Versailles
- Hunting camp for Louis XIII
- Louis XIV made it a castle
- 2000 windows - Private zoo with elephants
- 700 rooms - Chinese carousel
- 1250 fireplaces - Gondolas on canal
- 67 staircases
- 1800 acres of park
5Entrance to the Versailles Palace
6Hall of Mirrors-Versailles
7Bedchamber-Versailles
8The Cathedral of the Smolney Convent
9Francesco Borromini
- Rebellious, emotionally disturbed
- Berninis rival
- Concave convex surfaces created motion
- Suicide how?
- Fell on a sword
10Borromini
11BorrominiSan Carlo alle Quattro Fontane
12Sir Christopher WrenSt. Pauls Cathedral (London)
13Details Proportion
14Scroll
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17Sculpture
18Gianlorenzo Bernini
- More decorative than Renaissance
- Painter, playwright, composer
- Worked for Louis XIV
- Considered greatest sculptor
- David in motion
- Created a bronze canopy/altar for St. Peters
- -Taller than a 10 story building
- -Columns with carved vines, leaves, bees
19Gianlorenzo Bernini
- Also an architect
- Fountains
- Palaces
- Churches
- Piazza in front of St. Peters Basilica
20Apollo Daphne
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22Bernini altar
23BerniniTop of the altarat St. Peters
24BerniniEcstasy of St. Theresa
She believed she had been pierced by an angels
dart infusing her with divine love.
25Berninis David
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27Paintings
28Baroque Art
- Ornate and decorative
- No clear central figure
- Distorted origin of light
- Religious and secular
- Funded by popes and monarchs
- Baroque is sometimes used negatively to mean
gaudy and over-decorative.
29Caravaggio
- Intentionally sought to shock and offend
- evil genius and anti-Christ of painting
- Went from city to city fleeing the law
- Death of a Virgin causes a problem
- Daring innovator
30CaravaggioDeath of the Virgin
31Caravaggio Sacrifice
Caravaggio Sacrifice of Isaac
32Peter Paul Rubens
- Worked throughout Europe with many people
- Fat is beautiful, many nudes
- Painted suggestive rape scenes
- Portraits with sentimental looks
- Work is said to be vulgar and insincere
- Admired but disliked
33RubensThe Descent from the Cross
34RubensThe Three Graces
35Rembrandt van Rijn
- Light and dark color contrasts
- Paintings looked like photos
- Almost 100 self-portraits
- Early works detailed, physical action, many
subjects - Late works done quickly, psychological, single
subjects
36RembrandtThe Nightwatch
37RembrandtSelf-portrait
38Jans Vermeer
- Indoor paintings as if you were there
- Subject is always holding something
- Use of indirect lighting
- Used texture to give depth
39VermeerLady writing letter with her maid
40VermeerWoman Sleeping
41William Hogarth
- English artist as a social critic
- Created the comic strip
- First political cartoonist
- Overcome Englands inferiority complex
42HogarthJohn Wilkes, Esquire
43BedlamHogarth
44El Greco Domenikos Theotokopoulos
- Emphasis on Counter-Reformation
- Mannerism
- Elongation of bodies
- Use of color intense unusual
45Madonna Child
46Holy Trinity
47Diego Velazquez
- Spanish master
- Lifelike portraits
- Natural poses , no props
- Very influential and loved
48Velazquez
Pope Innocent X Juan de Pareja
49VelazquezVenus at her mirror
50Velazquez, Las Meninas
51Chardrins Silver Goblet
52GentileschisJudith Beheading Holofernes
53Self Portrait