Title: Baroque
1Baroque
2Late 16th century throughout 17th century
- Stylistically complex and often containing
opposing styles - Emotional response by invoking sensory stimuli
- Drama
- Movement
- Baroque pulled from the emotion and movement
idealized in Mannerism - Combined the above with ideals of solidity,
formidable figures and grandeur from High
Renaissance
3Background
- Rome artistic capital of Europe again
- Catholic church biggest patron of arts
- Associated with the Catholic Counter Reformation
- Movement spread outward from Rome
- Each area modified the movement to fit their
ideology.Spain/Latin America more zealous on
religious ideology, whereas in Holland it barely
appeared - France saw great culmination in Baroque through
patronage of Louis XIV, who saw the interaction
between the arts culminate in a powerful display
of royaltyVersailles and its gardens, art,
sculptures etc
4Notable Artists
- From ItalyCaravaggio, Annibale Carracci,
Gianlorenzo Bernini and Andrea Pozzo - From Flanders Peter Paul Rubens
5Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio
- 1573-1610
- Born in Caravaggio
- Orphaned at 11
- Apprenticed to Simone Peterzano for 4 years
- Traveled to Rome where a dealer introduced him to
Cardinal Francesco del Monte - Commissioned at age 24 to paint at the church San
Luigi dei Francesi - Created 3 panel works on St. Matthew that were so
realistic and dramatic, people were affronted - Despite criticismhe flourished and became
celebrated - Ran into troublewanted for murder and fled Rome,
waiting for a pardon from the Pope - He traveled incessantly
- Ended up in Malta, where he was celebrated as
great artist and received pardon - Wrongfully imprisoned for a couple days, the boat
that was to take him to Rome left with his
possessions but forgot him - He was so despondant, fatigued and ill, he
collapsed on beach and died a few days later
6The Inspiration of Saint Matthew 1602 Oil on
canvas, 9' 8 1/2" x 6' 2 1/2" Contarelli Chapel,
Church of San Luigi dei Francesi, Rome
7Judith Beheading Holofernes c. 1598 Oil on
canvas
8The Sacrifice of Isaac 1590-1610 Oil on canvas
9Annibale Carracci
- 1560-1609
- Belonged to a family of painters from Bolognese
- All extremely talented and eventually created a
school for artisans called Academia degli
Incamminati (Academy of the Progressives) - Stressed Life Drawing and incredible
draughtsmanship - Influenced and trained many incredible artists
- 1595, Annibale called to Rome to paint Cardinal
Odoardo Farnese to paint in his palace gallery - The ceiling in the larger gallery became one of
the great fresco masterpieces, in company with
Michaelangelos Sistine Chapel and Raphaels
Vatican works - Technically amazing
- Created hundreds of drawing preparing for the
frescoes - This planning was influential to artists
thereafter - Fell out of favor near the end of his
lifestopped painting for the last few years of
his life - Buried near Raphael
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11Detail of the Triumph of Bacchus and Ariadne by
Annibale Carracci, the Farnese Gallery, 1595
12The Virgin Appearing to St Luke and St
Catherine1592Oil on canvas
13Baroque architecture
- Utilized to help establish grandeur of Royal
class and strengthen ties to Catholic Church - 1) Standard practice to incorporate a horizontal
line of statues along roof to hide sloping angles - Introduced this concept to any horizontal line,
such as garden walls - 2) Use of statue forms to replace columns
caryatids uprights in the form of female or
telamons uprights in the male form - 3) Use of freize coat of arms, trophies etc
extolling royalty
14Characteristics
- Dramatic use of lighting either strong
light-and-shade contrasts (chiaroscuro effects)
as at the church of Weltenburg Abbey, or uniform
lighting by means of several windows (e.g. church
of Weingarten Abbey) - opulent use of colour and ornaments (putti or
figures made of wood (often gilded), plaster or
stucco, marble or faux finishing) - large-scale ceiling frescoes
- an external façade often characterized by a
dramatic central projection - the interior is a shell for painting, sculpture
and stucco (especially in the late Baroque) - illusory effects like trompe l'oeil(is an art
technique involving extremely realistic imagery
in order to create the optical illusion that the
depicted objects appear in three dimensions.) and
the blending of painting and architecture - pear-shaped domes in the Bavarian, Czech, Polish,
and Ukrainian Baroque - Marian and Holy Trinity columns erected in
Catholic countries, often in thanksgiving for
ending a plague
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16Sicilian Baroque San Benedetto in Catania.
17Vaux-le-Vicomte near Paris Louis Le Vau and
André Le Nôtre, 1661
18Wilanów palace in Warsaw represents a modest type
of baroque residence
19Sculpture
20Gianlorenzo Bernini
- 1598-1680
- Son of a sculptor, who instructed and helped
Bernini gain patronage - Virtuoso
- Transformed sculptural works from single
viewpoints to works that required the viewer to
walk around work to see complete story the
visual story often includes space beyond viewer - Integrated painting, architecture and sculpture
in his works - sculptor son Domenico summed him up best 'Aspro
di natura, fisso nell'operazione, ardente
nell'ira' - 'stern by nature, rock steady in
work, warm in anger'.
21Apollo and Daphne1622-25Carrara marble
22David1623-24White marble
23Baldaccino over the High Altar of St.
Peter's1624-33Bronze and goldHeight 95
feetVatican, Rome
24Ecstasy of St. Teresa1647-52Marbleheight c.
11' 6"
25Peter Paul Rubens
- Flemish born painter 1577-1640
- Knighted in Spain and England
- Painter, architect, scholar
- Style characteristics Movement, color, and
sensuality
26The Conversion of St. Paul
27Christ and St. John with Angels
28The Rape of Europa c. 1630
29Daniel in the Lions' Den (detail) 1613
30Critique Andrea Pozzo SantIgnazio Church Trompe
Loeil Ceiling 1680's
31Michaelangelo sistine chapel ceiling
32Resources
- http//www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/glo/baroque/
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palazzo_Farnese
- http//www.students.sbc.edu/oneal08/Cornaro20Chap
el.html - http//www.artchive.com/artchive/B/bernini.html
- http//www.essential-architecture.com/STYLE/STY-Ba
roque.htm - http//www.peterpaulrubens.org/
33Critique
Artemisia Gentileschi 1593 1656 Judith
Beheading Holofernes
34Correggio Ganymede1531-32Oil on canvas
Comparative Summary
Peter Paul Rubens Christ and St. John with Angels
oil on canvas