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Northern Renaissance Art

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Title: Northern Renaissance Art


1
The Northern Renaissance
By Susan M. PojerHorace Greeley HS Chappaqua,
NY
2
Renaissance Art in Northern Europe
  • Should not be considered an appendage to Italian
    art.
  • But, Italian influence was strong.
  • Painting in OIL, developed in Flanders, was
    widely adopted in Italy.
  • The differences between the two cultures
  • Italy ? change was inspired by humanism with its
    emphasis on the revival of the values of
    classical antiquity.
  • No. Europe ? change was driven by religious
    reform, the return to Christian values, and the
    revolt against the authority of the Church.
  • More princes kings were patrons of artists.

3
Characteristics of Northern Renaissance Art
  • The continuation of late medieval attention to
    details.
  • Tendency toward realism naturalism less
    emphasis on the classical ideal.
  • Interest in landscapes.
  • More emphasis on middle-class and peasant life.
  • Details of domestic interiors.
  • Great skill in portraiture.

4
Flemish Realism
5
Jan van Eyck (1395 1441)
  • More courtly and aristocratic work.
  • Court painter to the Duke of Burgundy, Philip the
    Good.
  • ?The Virgin and Chancellor Rolin, 1435.

6
Van Eyck -Adoration of the Lamb, Ghent
Altarpiece, 1432
7
Van Eyck? The CrucifixionThe Last
Judgment ?1420-1425
8
Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife(Wedding
Portrait) Jan Van Eyck1434
9
Jan van Eyck - Giovanni Arnolfini His Wife
(details)
10
Rogier van der Weyden (1399-1464)
The Deposition 1435
11
van der Weydens Deposition (details)
12
Quentin Massys (1465-1530)
  • The Ugly Dutchess, 1525-1530 ?

13
Massys The Moneylender His Wife, 1514
14
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15
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16
Lucas Cranach the Elder
Old Man with a Young Woman
Amorous Old Woman with a Young Man
17
Matthias Grünewald (1470-1528)
  • Converted to Lutheranism.
  • Possibly involved in the Peasants Revolt on the
    peasants side.
  • Depictions of intense emotion, especially painful
    emotion.
  • The Mocking of Christ, 1503 ?

18
Matthias Grünewalds The Crucifixion, 1502
19
Dürer Self-Portrait in Fur-Collared Robe, 1500
20
Dürer The Last Supperwoodcut, 1510
21
Durer The Triumphal Arch, 1515-1517
22
The Triumphal Arch, details
23
The Triumphal Arch, details
24
Dürer FourHorsemenof theApocalypsewoodcut,
1498
25
Artist to the Tudors
Henry VIII (left), 1540 and the future Edward VI
(above), 1543.
26
Holbeins, The Ambassadors, 1533
A Skull
27
Multiple Perspectives
28
The English Were More Interested in Architecture
than Painting
Hardwick Hall, designed by Robert Smythson in the
1590s, for the Duchess of Shrewsbury more
medieval in style.
29
Burghley House for William Cecil
The largest grandest house of the early
Elizabethan era.
30
Hieronymus Bosch (1450-1516)
  • A pessimistic view of human nature.
  • Had a wild and lurid imagination.

31
HieronymusBoschThe Garden of Earthy
Delights1500
32
HieronymusBoschThe Garden of Earthy
Delights(details)1500
33
HieronymusBoschThe Cureof Folly1478-1480
34
HieronymusBoschThe Temptation of St.
Anthony1506-1507
35
Bruegels, Tower of Babel, 1563
36
Bruegels, Mad Meg, 1562
37
Bruegels, The Beggars, 1568
38
Bruegels, Parable of the Blind Leading the
Blind, 1568
39
Bruegels, Niederlandisch Proverbs, 1559
40
Bruegels, The Triumph of Death, 1562
41
Bruegels, Hunters in the Snow, 1565
42
Bruegels, Winter Scene, 1565
43
Bruegels, The Harvesters, 1565
44
Spain
45
Domenikos Theotokopoulos (El Greco)
  • 1541 1614.
  • He deliberately distorts elongates his figures,
    and seats them in a lurid, unearthly atmosphere.
  • He uses an agitated, flickering light.
  • He ignores the rules of perspective, and
    heightens the effect by areas of brilliant color.
  • Fitting expression of the Spanish
    Counter-Reformation.

46
El GrecoChrist in Agony on the Cross1600s
47
El GrecoPortrait of aCardinal1600
48
El Grecos, The Burial of Count Orgaz, 1586-1588
49
El Grecos, The Burial of Count Orgaz, 1586-1588
(details)
50
El Grecos, The Burial of Count Orgaz, 1578-1580
51
El GrecoThe View of Toledo 1597-1599
52
Conclusions
  • The artistic production of Northern Europe in the
    16c was vast, rich, and complex.
  • The Northern Renaissance ended with a Mannerist
    phase, which lasted a generation longer in the
    North than it did in Italy, where it was outmoded
    by 1600.
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