Title: Do Now (Connection to Film)
1Do Now (Connection to Film)
- Think back to the film from last class
- Define the following in regards to the
Renaissance - Commerce
- Globalization
- How did these two factors impact Europe in the
mid 14th centaury?
2The Crusades
- Why Important?
- How did they impact the development of the
Renaissance? - What other factors influenced the development of
the Renaissance?
3The Crusades
- Why Important?
- Increased contact with Eastern civilizations
(Muslims) leading to increased commerce and
globalization - How did they impact the development of the
Renaissance? - for Italian port cities
- intellectual ideas
- What other factors influenced the development of
the Renaissance?
4Causes of the Renaissance
- Black Death Political disorder
- Economic recession
- Renaissance
514th Century Recovery
- Black Death
- Political disorder
- Economic recession
6The Black Death (Plague)
- Europe loses 1/3 its population to disease
- Labor is hard to find (scarce)
- Towns and many serfs freed from feudal
obligations - Churchs influence declines.
- Disrupts pattern of trade.
7Economic Effects of the Crusades
- Increased demand for Middle Eastern products
- Stimulated production of goods to trade in Middle
Eastern markets - Encouraged the use of credit (borrowing money)
and banking.
8Important Economic Concepts
- Church rule against usury and the banks practice
of charging interest helped to secularize
northern Italy. - Letters of credit served to expand the supply of
money and speed-up trade. - New accounting and bookkeeping practices (use of
Arabic numerals) were introduced.
9Impact of Crusades and Black Death
- Feudalism no longer works
- Growth of trading towns and cities
- Cities are free from feudal obligations
- Manorialism no longer works
- Not enough workers
- Demand for Middle Eastern Goods causes increase
in trade
10The Italian Renaissance
- Rebirth?
- Classical Greco-Roman learning, art, architecture
- circ. 1300 to 1527(?)
11Italy
- Powerful city-states
- Politically, economically, socially
- Secularism
- Education System
- Remnants of Greatness
12City States
- Italy lacked a single ruler
- Major City States
- Papal
- Milan
- Venice
- Florence
13Milan
- 1447 Francesco Sforza (Duke)
- Strong centralized state
- Efficient tax system
14Florence, Venice, Genoa (Italy)
- Were initially independent city-states governed
as republics. - Had access to trade routes connecting Europe with
Middle Eastern Markets. - Served as trading centers for the distribution of
goods to northern Europe
15Venice
- Run by merchant class (aristocracy)
16Florence
- 1434 Cosimo grandson Lorenzo de Medici (d.
1492) - Spoils system helped them keep control
- Cultural center of italy
- Supporters (Patrons) of the arts!
- Balance of Power
17Papal States/Rome
- Rodrigo Borgia (aka. Pope Alexander VI - 1492)
- Highly Secular
- Cesare Borgia Commander of Papal Armies
18Renaissance Society
- Social Hierarchy
- Clergy
- Nobility
- Everyone else
- Patricians / traders, merchants
- Burghers / shop-keepers, artisans
- Low wage earners, unemployed
- Patriarchal in nature
- Arranged marriages w/ dowries
19Do Now Compare
20Humanism
- Humanism was an ideal that focused on the world
of mankind as much as a concern for the
hereafter. - Rejected medieval view of humanity and focused on
the goodness of mankind
21Humanism
- Emphasis on the individual
- Well rounded
- Educated
- Loyal
- Physically fit
22High Renaissance
23Art in Italy
- Leonardo da Vinci
- Mona Lisa
- Last Supper
24Masaccio
- Frescoes
- Wet plaster / water based paint
- Perspective 1 or 2 point
25Art Stresses
- Organization
- Geometry
- Realism
26Sculpture
27Filippo Brunelleschi
- Architecture
- Medicis were patrons
- Church of Saint Lorenzo
28Artwork in the Middle Ages
29Techniques in Medieval Art
- Halo
- 2-D
- Theme
- Color
- Proportion
30The Epiphany
Giotto di Bondone
31Saint Andrew
Simone Martini
32The Pentecost
Mosan
33Artwork in the Renaissance
34Renaissance timeline
MichelangeloDavid
DonatelloDavid
Michelangelo
Raphael
Leonardo
REFORMATION
1400
1500
1600
35Techniques in Renaissance Art
- Perspective
- Vanishing Point
- Foreshortening
- Chiaroscuro
- Colors used
- Sfumato
- Posto / Contrapposto
- Realism
- Portrait
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37Plato
Aristotle
Socrates
Raphael
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39The Marriage of the Virgin Raphael
40The Marriage of the Virgin Raphael
41Andrea Mantegna c. 1480
42Andrea Mantegna c. 1480
43Annunciation with St. EmidiusBy Carlo
Crivelli
44Annunciation with St. Emidius By Carlo
Crivelli
45Young Woman with a Water Pitcher
(1622) Johannes Vermeer
46Young Woman with a Water Pitcher
(1622) Johannes Vermeer
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50Giovanni Arnolfini and his Wife
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52Sfumato
53The Last Supper Leonardo DaVinci Where do we
see examples of all these different techniques?
54Renaissance Art
- Evaluating the Progression from Medieval to
Renaissance
55- Madonna and Child
- in Glory
- By Jacopa di Cione
- 1360/65
56- Miraculous
- Mass of Martin
- of Tours
- Franconian
- School
- Ca. 1440
57- Madonna and Child
- with St. John
- Guiliano Bugiardini
- 1510
58- Adoration of the
- Shepherds
- Giovanni
- Agostino da Lodi
- 1510
59The Adoration of the Magi by the Kress
Monnogrammist, ca. 1550/1560
60The Bean Eater by Annibale Carracci, 1582/83
61Spread of Renaissance
- Possible w/Gutenbergs innovative movable metal
type printing press (1445) - By 1500, a thousand printers published 40000
tiles (1/2 religious) - Literacy rates spiked as did cultural diffusion
62Northern Renaissance
- Starts in 1450, 100 years later than Italy
- Cultivated knowledge of classics ( early
Christian writers) - Tried to apply classics to Christianity for
reform - Promoted simpler Christian interpretation than
complicated Medieval dogma
63Northern vs. Italian Art
64Northern Renaissance Art
- Like humanism, religion based/ Devotional
- In painting, Flanders School used oil/more
intense w/realism perspective not as important - Due to religion, art seen in illuminated
manuscripts, especially Limbourg Brothers
altarpieces
65Northern v. Italian Art
- Canvas, Sculpture, Fresco, tempura, architecture
- Perspective, Symmetry, Balance, Good sense of
Mass - Classical Mythology, Religious
- Figures w/ Mass/Volume, Use of Anatomy
- Wood Panel, Engraving, Illustration, Oil on,
glazing - Detail, Naturalism
- Interiors, Portraits, Religious
- Extreme / Minute Detail
Medium
Style
Subject
Famous
66- Book of Hours (religious prayer book)
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68Jan van Eyck
- Realistic ainter who worked on details
- His Altarpiece of Ghent, portrait of a Man
Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and his Wife are
his most famous works
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74Rogier van der Weyden Deposition
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76Robert Campins Merode Altarpiece
77Albrecht DurerSelf Portrait(1500)
78- St. Jerome dans sa cellule
- (1514)
- Engraving
79Pieter Brughel The Harvesters 1565, Oil on wood
80Peasant Wedding 1568
81Women?
- Rare, but at times politically influential
- Isabella dEste (Mantua)
- Turn to page 422
82Intellectual Renaissance
- Study of classical Greco-Roman past
- Liberal arts
- Grammar
- Rhetoric
- Poetry
- Moral philosophy
- Ethics
- history
- 14th cent. Father of Italian Humanism
- Stressed classical Latin (Rome)
- Civic duty
- Individual purpose is to best serve the state
83The Intellectual Renaissance
84Vernacular
Francois Rabelais
- English
- The Canterbury Tales
- Collection of stories from individuals from all
walks of life
- French
- Pantagruel and Gargantua
- Son and Father Giants
- Comical Satire
- Italian
- Divine Comedy
- How to gain salvation through his travels through
the levels of hell, purgatory, heaven
85Niccolo Machiavelli
- Florentine Diplomat
- Forced into exile
- Wrote The Prince
- Question How does a Prince obtain and maintain
power?
86How Should Nobility Act?
- Baldassare Castiglione says
- The Book of the Courtier / Il Cortiere
- 1. born into, have character
- 2. physical, military, and classical edu.
- 3. show achievement w/ grace
- Purpose win favor with and serve Prince
87End of Renaissance
- 1527
- Italian wars 30 years
- French Charles VIII (1494) takes over kingdom of
Naples - Other city-states turn to Spanish for protection
(Charles I) - Troops are not able to be paid, thus sack Rome
for the spoils