Presentation - renaissance. Periods of the early renaissance Download presentation masterpiece of early renaissance art

Italy late 13th century - 16th century

Slide 2: The periods of development of Renaissance art

Pre-revival to. 13 - 14 centuries. Early Renaissance 15th c. High Renaissance to. 15 - 16 centuries. Late Renaissance to. 16th century.

slide 3

to. 13-14 centuries. Pre-Renaissance Proto-Renaissance Trecento

Slide 4: The Art of the Pre-Renaissance, 13th - 14th century

Giotto "Kiss of Judas" "Lamentation" Belfry of the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore

slide 5

slide 6

Slide 7

Early Renaissance Art 15th century Botticelli "Spring" "The Birth of Venus" "Venus and Mars" "Annunciation" "Abandoned"

Slide 8

Slide 9

10

Slide 10

11

slide 11

12

slide 12

13

slide 13

14

Slide 14

15

slide 15

Early Renaissance Art 15th century Donatello "David" "Condottiere Gattamelata"

16

slide 16

17

Slide 17

18

Slide 18

19

Slide 19

High Renaissance Art 16th century Leonardo da Vinci "Madonna Benois" "Madonna Litta" "La Gioconda" "Lady with an Ermine" "Self-Portrait" (etching) "The Last Supper" (fresco)

20

Slide 20

21

slide 21

22

slide 22

23

slide 23

24

slide 24

25

Slide 25

26

slide 26

27

Slide 27

28

Slide 28

High Renaissance Art 16th century Raphael Conestabile Madonna Beautiful Gardener Sistine Madonna Betrothal of Mary School of Athens (fresco)

29

Slide 29

30

slide 30

31

Slide 31

32

slide 32

33

Slide 33

34

slide 34

Art of the High Renaissance 16th century Michelangelo "David" "Pieta" Painting on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel (frescoes) Dome of the Cathedral of St. Petra in Rome

35

Slide 35

36

slide 36

37

Slide 37

38

Slide 38

39

Slide 39

40

Slide 40

41

Slide 41

Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519), Italian painter, sculptor, architect, scientist and engineer. The founder of the artistic culture of the High Renaissance, Leonardo da Vinci developed as a master, studying in 1467-1472 in Florence with A. del Verrocchio. The methods of work in the workshop of Verrocchio, where artistic practice was coupled with technical experimentation, as well as rapprochement with the astronomer P. Toscanelli, contributed to the emergence of the scientific interests of the young Leonardo da Vinci. In his early works (the head of an angel in Verrocchio's Baptism, after 1470, the Annunciation, circa 1474, both in the Uffizi; the so-called Benois Madonna, circa 1478, State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg), the artist, developing the traditions of the art of the Early Renaissance, emphasized the smooth volume of forms with soft chiaroscuro, sometimes enlivened faces with a barely perceptible smile, achieving with its help the transfer of subtle states of mind. Recording the results of countless observations in sketches, sketches and field studies performed in various techniques (Italian and silver pencils, sanguine, pen, etc.), Leonardo da Vinci achieved, sometimes resorting to an almost caricatured grotesque, sharpness in the transfer of facial expressions, and physical brought the features and movement of the human body into perfect harmony with the spiritual atmosphere of the composition.

42

Slide 42

In 1481 or 1482, Leonardo da Vinci entered the service of the ruler of Milan, Lodovico Moro, acting as a military engineer, hydraulic engineer, and organizer of court holidays. For over 10 years he worked on the equestrian monument of Francesco Sforza, the father of Lodovico Moro (a life-size clay model of the monument was destroyed when Milan was taken by the French in 1500). During the Milan period, Leonardo da Vinci created the “Madonna in the Rocks” (1483-1494, Louvre, Paris; 2nd version - about 1497-1511, National Gallery, London), where the characters are presented surrounded by a bizarre rocky landscape, and the finest chiaroscuro ( sfumato) plays the role of a spiritually binding principle, emphasizing the warmth of human relations. In the refectory of the monastery of Santa Maria delle Grazie, he made a wall painting “The Last Supper” (1495-1497; due to the peculiarities of the technique used by Leonardo da Vinci - oil with tempera - it was preserved in a badly damaged form; restored in the 20th century), which marks one from the peaks of European painting; its high ethical and spiritual content is expressed in the mathematical regularity of the composition, which logically continues the real architectural space, in a clear, strictly developed system of gestures and facial expressions of the characters, in the harmonious balance of forms. Being engaged in architecture, Leonardo da Vinci developed various versions of the “ideal” city and projects of the central-domed temple, which had a great influence on the contemporary architecture of Italy.

43

slide 43

After the fall of Milan, Leonardo da Vinci's life passed in incessant moving (1500-1502, 1503-1506, 1507 - Florence; 1500 - Mantua and Venice; 1506, 1507-1513 - Milan; 1513-1516 - Rome; 1517-1519 - France) . In Florence, he worked on the painting of the Great Council Hall in the Palazzo Vecchio “The Battle of Anghiari” (1503-1506, not finished, known from copies from cardboard), standing at the origins of the European battle genre of modern times. In the portrait of Monna Lisa or Mona Lisa (circa 1503, Louvre, Paris), he embodied the sublime ideal of eternal femininity and human charm; an important element of the composition was a cosmically vast landscape, melting into a cold blue haze. The late works of Leonardo da Vinci include projects for a monument to Marshal Trivulzio (1508-1512), the altarpiece “St. Anna with Mary and the Christ Child” (circa 1500-1507, Louvre, Paris), completing the search for a master in the field of light-air perspective and harmonic pyramidal construction of the composition, and “John the Baptist” (circa 1513-1517, Louvre, Paris), where the somewhat sugary ambiguity of the image indicates an increase in crisis moments in the artist’s work. In a series of drawings depicting a universal catastrophe (the so-called cycle with the “Flood”, Italian pencil, pen, circa 1514-1516, Royal Library, Windsor), reflections on the insignificance of man in front of the power of the elements are combined with rationalistic ideas about the cyclic nature of natural processes. The most important source for studying the views of Leonardo da Vinci are his notebooks and manuscripts (about 7 thousand sheets), excerpts from which were included in the “Treatise on Painting”, compiled after the death of the master by his student F. Melzi and which had a huge impact on European theoretical thought and artistic practice.

44

Slide 44

In the “dispute of the arts” Leonardo da Vinci gave the first place to painting, understanding it as a universal language (similar to mathematics in the field of sciences), capable of embodying all the diverse manifestations of the rational principle in nature. As a scientist and engineer, he enriched almost all areas of science of that time. Leonardo da Vinci, a prominent representative of the new natural science based on experiment, paid special attention to mechanics, seeing in it the main key to the secrets of the universe; his brilliant constructive guesses were far ahead of his contemporary era (projects of rolling mills, earth-moving machines, a submarine, aircraft). The observations he collected on the influence of transparent and translucent media on the coloring of objects led to the establishment of scientifically based principles of aerial perspective in the art of the High Renaissance. Studying the device of the eye, Leonardo da Vinci made the right guesses about the nature of binocular vision. In anatomical drawings, he laid the foundations of modern scientific illustration, and also studied botany and biology. A tireless experimental scientist and brilliant artist, Leonardo da Vinci became a universally recognized symbol of the Renaissance.

45

Slide 45

Raphael (actually Raffaello Santi or Sanzio, Raffaello Santi, Sanzio) (1483-1520), Italian painter and architect. In his work, the humanistic ideas of the High Renaissance about a beautiful and perfect person living in harmony with the world, the ideals of life-affirming beauty characteristic of the era, were most clearly embodied in his work. Rafael, the son of the painter Giovanni Santi, spent his early years in Urbino, in 1500-1504 he studied with Perugino in Perugia. The works of this period are marked by subtle poetry and soft lyricism of landscape backgrounds (“The Knight's Dream”, National Gallery, London; “Three Graces”, Conde Museum, Chantilly; “Madonna Conestabile”, State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg; all - around 1500-1502 ). The altar image of Raphael's Betrothal of Mary (1504, Brera Gallery, Milan) is close in compositional and spatial solution to Perugino's fresco “Handing the Keys to St. Peter” in the Sistine Chapel of the Vatican. From 1504, Raphael worked in Florence, where he got acquainted with the work of Leonardo da Vinci and Fra Bartolommeo, studied anatomy and scientific perspective. The numerous images of Madonnas created by him in Florence (“Madonna of the Granduca”, 1505, Pitti Gallery, Florence; “Madonna with the Christ Child and John the Baptist” or “Beautiful Gardener”, 1507, Louvre, Paris; “Madonna with a Goldfinch”, Uffizi) brought All-Italian fame to the artist.

46

Slide 46

In 1508, Raphael received an invitation from Pope Julius II to Rome, where he was able to get to know the ancient monuments better and took part in archaeological excavations. Fulfilling the order of the pope, Raphael created murals of the halls (stations) of the Vatican, glorifying the ideals of freedom and earthly happiness of a person, the limitlessness of his physical and spiritual capabilities. In the calm grandeur, harmoniously harmonious composition of the murals, architectural backgrounds play an important role, innovatively developing the trends of contemporary Italian architecture to Raphael. In Stanza della Senyatura (1509-1511), the artist presented the main areas of spiritual activity in his era: theology (“Disputation”), philosophy (“Athenian school”), poetry (“Parnassus”), jurisprudence (“Wisdom, Measure, Strength” ), as well as allegorical, biblical and mythological scenes on the ceiling corresponding to the main compositions. In the Stanza d "Eliodoro with frescoes on legendary and historical subjects ("The Expulsion of Eliodor", "Meeting of Pope Leo I with Attila", "Mass in Bolsena", "The Liberation of the Apostle

47

Slide 47

Peter from prison”) Raphael’s talent as a master of chiaroscuro and harmonious, soft and light coloring was manifested with particular force. The drama that grows in these frescoes takes on a touch of theatrical pathos in the murals of the Stanza del Incendio (1514-1517), which Raphael already performed with numerous assistants and students. Raphael's cardboards are close to the Vatican frescoes, to a series of tapestries for decorating the walls of the Sistine Chapel (1515-1516, Italian pencil, brush coloring, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, and other collections). The fresco “The Triumph of Galatea” at the Villa Farnesina in Rome (1514) is imbued with the spirit of ancient classics with its cult of sensual beauty. In Rome, the brilliant talent of Raphael as a portraitist reached maturity (“Portrait of a Cardinal”, about 1512, Prado, Madrid; “Woman in White” or “Donna Velata”, about 1513, Palatina Gallery, Florence; portrait of B. Castiglione, 1515-1516, Louvre, Paris, etc.). In the "Madonnas" of Raphael of the Roman period, the idyllic mood of his early works is replaced by a recreation of deeper human, maternal feelings ("Alba Madonna", circa 1510-1511, National Gallery, Washington; "Madonna di Foligno", circa 1511-1512, Vatican Pinakothek) ; as a full of dignity and spiritual purity, the intercessor of humanity appears in the most famous work of Raphael - “The Sistine Madonna” (1515-1519, Art Gallery, Dresden).

48

Slide 48

In the last years of his life, Raphael was so overloaded with orders that he entrusted the execution of many of them to his students and assistants (Giulio Romano, J.F. Penny, etc.), usually limiting himself to general supervision of the work. In these works (the frescoes of the “Loggia of Psyche of the Villa Farnesina”, 1514-1518; frescoes and stucco in the Loggias of the Vatican, 1519; the unfinished altar image “Transfiguration”, 1519-1520, Vatican Pinakothek), the features of the crisis of the Renaissance, the attraction to mannerism, were clearly manifested. Of exceptional importance for the development of Italian architecture was the activity of Raphael as an architect, representing, as it were, a link between the work of Bramante and Palladio. After the death of Bramante, Raphael took the position of chief architect of St. Peter's Cathedral in Rome (he drew up a new plan for the cathedral, based on the architectural type of the basilica), and also completed the construction of the Vatican courtyard with loggias begun by Bramante. Among other buildings of Raphael: the round church of Sant Eligio degli Orefici (built from 1509) and the Chigi chapel of the church of Santa Maria del Popolo (1512-1520) in Rome, the elegant Palazzo Vidoni Caffarelli (from 1515) in Rome and Pandolfini ( c 152O) in Florence. The author's plan of Raphael was partially realized in the Roman villa Madama (since 1517; construction was continued by the architect A. de Sangallo the Younger), organically connected with the surrounding gardens and terraced park. The art of Raphael, which had a huge impact on European painting of the 16th-19th and, partly, of the 20th centuries, for centuries retained for artists and viewers the value of an indisputable artistic authority and model.

49

Slide 49

Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564) Italian sculptor, painter, architect and poet. In the art of Michelangelo, with great expressive power, both the deeply human ideals of the High Renaissance, full of heroic pathos, and the tragic sense of the crisis of the humanistic worldview, characteristic of the late Renaissance era, were embodied. Michelangelo studied in Florence in the workshop of D. Ghirlandaio (1488-1489) and with the sculptor Bertoldo di Giovanni (1489-1490), however, his acquaintance with the works of Giotto, Donatello, Masaccio, Jacopo della Quercia, the study of monuments was of decisive importance for the creative development of Michelangelo antique plastic. Already in youthful works (the reliefs “Madonna at the Stairs”, “Battle of the Centaurs”, about 1490-1492, Casa Buonarroti, Florence, both marble, like all the mentioned sculptural works of Michelangelo), the main features of the sculptor’s work were determined - monumentality and plastic power, internal tension and drama of images, reverence for human beauty. Working in Rome in the late 1490s, Michelangelo paid tribute to the passion for ancient sculpture in the statue of Bacchus (1496-1497, National Museum, Florence); he introduced new humanistic content, bright convincingness of images into the traditional Gothic scheme of the Lamentation of Christ group (circa 1497-1498, St. Peter's Cathedral, Rome).

50

Slide 50

In 1501, Michelangelo returned to Florence, where he created a colossal statue of "David" (1501-1504, Accademia Gallery, Florence), which embodied the heroic impulse and civic prowess of the Florentines who threw off the yoke of Medici tyranny. In the cardboard for painting the Palazzo Vecchio “The Battle of Cascine” (1504-1504, copies have been preserved), he sought to express the readiness of citizens to defend the republic. In 1505, Pope Julius II invited Michelangelo to Rome and entrusted him with the creation of his own tomb. For the tomb of Julius II, completed only in 1545 (the Church of San Pietro in Vincoli in Rome), Michelangelo created a number of statues, including those endowed with a mighty will, titanic strength and temperament of “Moses” (1515-1516), filled with the tragedy of “The Dying Slave ” and “The Insurgent Slave” (1513-1516, Louvre, Paris), as well as 4 unfinished figures of slaves (1532-1534), in which the work of the sculptor is clearly visible, boldly delving into the stone block in some places and leaving other places almost unfinished . In the pictorial cycle, executed by Michelangelo on the vault of the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican (1508-1512; includes scenes from the book of Genesis in the central part of the ceiling, monumental figures of the prophets and sibyls on the side parts of the vault, images of the ancestors of Christ and biblical episodes in stripping, sails and lunettes) , the artist created a grandiose, solemn, easily visible in general and in detail composition, perceived as a hymn to physical and spiritual beauty, as a statement of the limitless creative possibilities of God and man created in his likeness. The frescoes of the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, like other paintings by Michelangelo, are characterized by the clarity of plastic modeling, the intense expressiveness of the drawing and composition, the predominance of muted exquisite colors in the colorful range.

51

Slide 51

In 1516-1534, Michelangelo again lived in Florence, worked on the design of the facade of the church of San Lorenzo and the architectural and sculptural ensemble of the tomb of the Medici family in the New Sacristy of the same church (1520-1534), as well as on sculptures for the tomb of Pope Julius II. Michelangelo's attitude in the 1520s becomes tragic. The deep pessimism that gripped him in the face of the death of political and civil liberties in Italy, the crisis of Renaissance humanism, was reflected in the figurative structure of the sculptures of the Medici tomb - in heavy meditation and aimless movement of the statues of the Dukes of Lorenzo and Giuliano, devoid of portrait features, in the dramatic symbolism of four figures depicting “ Evening”, “Night”, “Morning” and “Day” and personifying the irreversibility of the flow of time. In 1534 Michelangelo again moved to Rome, where he spent the last 30 years of his life. The late paintings of the master amaze with the tragic power of images (the fresco “The Last Judgment” on the altar wall of the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican, 1536-1541), are permeated with bitter reflections on the futility of human life, on the painful hopelessness of the search for truth (partly anticipating the baroque painting of the painting of the Paolina Chapel in the Vatican , 1542-1550). The last sculptural works of Michelangelo include the “Pieta” for the Florentine Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore (before 1550-1555, broken by Michelangelo and restored by his student M. Calcagni; now in the Accademia Gallery, Florence) and the sculptural group “Pieta Rondanini ”(1555-1564, Museum of Ancient Art, Milan), intended by him for his own tombstone and not finished.

52

Slide 52

The late work of Michelangelo is characterized by a gradual departure from painting and sculpture and an appeal to architecture and poetry. The buildings of Michelangelo are distinguished by increased plasticity, internal dynamism and tension of the masses; an important role in them is played by the relief design of the wall, the active chiaroscuro organization of its surface with the help of high pilasters, emphatically voluminous cornices, architraves and door portals. Back in his last Florentine period, he designed and supervised the construction of the building of the Laurenzian Library (1523-1534), creating an expressive ensemble that included a dynamic lobby space with stairs and a calm, austere interior of the reading room. From 1546, Michelangelo supervised the construction of St. Peter's Cathedral in Rome and the construction of the Capitol Square ensemble (both works were completed after his death). The trapezoid square of the Capitol with the ancient equestrian monument of Emperor Marcus Aurelius in the center, the first Renaissance town-planning ensemble, designed by one artist, closes with the Conservative Palace, is flanked by two palaces symmetrically placed on its sides and opens into the city with a wide staircase. In the plan of the Cathedral of St. Peter, Michelangelo, developing the ideas of Bramante and preserving the idea of ​​centricity, strengthened the significance of the cross in the interior space. During the life of Michelangelo, the eastern part of the cathedral was built with the foundation of a grandiose dome, erected in 1586-1593 by the architect M. Giacomo della Porta, somewhat lengthening its proportions. The depth of thought and high tragedy marked the lyrics of Michelangelo. In his madrigals and sonnets, love is interpreted as a person's eternal desire for beauty and harmony, lamentations about the artist's loneliness in a hostile world side by side with the bitter disappointments of a humanist in the face of triumphant violence. The work of Michelangelo, which became the brilliant final stage of the Italian Renaissance, played a huge role in the development of European art, in many ways prepared the formation of mannerism, and had a great influence on the formation of the principles of the Baroque.

53

Slide 53

Botticelli (Botticelli) Sandro [actually Alesandro di Mariano Filipepi, Alessandro di Mariano Filipepi] (1445–1510), Italian painter of the Early Renaissance. Belonged to the Florentine school, around 1465-1466 he studied with Filippo Lippi; in 1481–1482 he worked in Rome. The early works of Botticelli are characterized by a clear construction of space, a clear light and shade modeling, an interest in everyday details (“The Adoration of the Magi”, about 1476-1471, Uffizi). From the end of the 1470s, after Botticelli's rapprochement with the court of the rulers of Florence, the Medici and the circle of Florentine humanists, the features of aristocracy and refinement intensified in his work, paintings appeared on ancient and allegorical themes, in which sensual pagan images were imbued with sublime and at the same time poetic, lyrical spirituality (“Spring”, circa 1477-1478, “The Birth of Venus”, circa 1483-1484, both in the Uffizi).

54

Slide 54

The animation of the landscape, the fragile beauty of the figures, the musicality of light, quivering lines, the transparency of exquisite colors, as if woven from reflexes, create in them an atmosphere of dreaminess and slight sadness. In the frescoes made by Botticelli in 1481–1482 in the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican (“Scenes from the Life of Moses”, “The Punishment of Korea, Dathan and Aviron”, etc.), the majestic harmony of the landscape and ancient architecture is combined with the internal plot tension, the sharpness of the portrait characteristics inherent in , along with the search for subtle nuances of the inner state of the human soul, and easel portraits of the master (portrait of Giuliano Medici, 1470s, Accademia Carrara, Bergamo). In the 1490s, during the era of social unrest that shook Florence and the mystical-ascetic sermons of the monk Savonarola, notes of drama and religious exaltation appear in the art of Botticelli (“Slander”, after 1495, Uffizi), but his drawings for Dante’s “Divine Comedy” ( 1492-1497, Engraving Cabinet, Berlin, and the Vatican Library) while sharp emotional expressiveness retain the lightness of the line and the clarity of the Renaissance images.

55

Slide 55

Donatello (Donatello; actually Donato di Niccolo di Betto Bardi, Donato di Niccolo di Betto Bardi) (circa 1386-1466), Italian sculptor of the Early Renaissance. In 1404-1407 he studied at the workshop of L. Ghiberti. He worked mainly in Florence, as well as in Siena (1423-1434 m 1457-1461), Rome (1430-1433), Padua (1444-1453), in 1451 he visited Mantua, Venice, Ferrara. One of the first in Italy, Donatello creatively comprehended the experience of ancient plastic arts and came to the creation of classical forms and types of Renaissance sculpture - a free-standing statue, a wall tombstone, an equestrian monument, a “picturesque” relief. In the work of Donatello, the search for new expressive means characteristic of the art of the Renaissance, a deep interest in reality in all its diversity of concrete manifestations, the desire for sublime generalization and heroic idealization were embodied. The early works of the master (statues of the prophets for the side portal of the Florentine Cathedral, 1406-1408) are still marked by the Gothic rigidity of forms, the crushed fragmentation of the linear rhythm. However, already the statue of St. Mark for the facade of the Orsanmichele church in Florence (marble, 1411-1413) is distinguished by clear tectonics of plastic masses, strength and calm grandeur.

56

Slide 56

The Renaissance ideal of the warrior-hero is embodied in the image of St. George for the same church (marble, circa 1416, National Museum, Florence). The statues of the prophets for the campanile of the Florentine Cathedral (marble, 1416–1435, Cathedral Museum, Florence) represent a peculiar gallery of highly individual portrait images. In the “painterly” reliefs (“The Feast of Herod” on the bronze font of the Siena Baptistery, 1423–1427; the reliefs of the Old Sacristy of the Church of San Lorenzo in Florence, 1434–1443), he created the impression of a great depth of space with the help of linear perspective, precise delineation of plans and gradual lowering the height of the image. The Renaissance implementation of ancient forms marked such works by Donatello as the tombstone of Baldassare Kosh (antipope John XXIII; together with the architect Michelozzo di Bartolommeo, marble, bronze, 1425–1427, the baptistery in Florence), which uses an antique-shaped sarcophagus, allegorical figures and an order framing, Annunciation altarpiece (the so-called Cavalcanti altarpiece; limestone, terracotta, circa 1428–1433, Santa Croce Church, Florence) with lavish antiquities decoration, chant tribune of the Florence Cathedral (marble with mosaics and gilding, 1433–1439, Cathedral Museum , Florence) with a cheerful round dance of merry putti,

57

Last presentation slide: Renaissance Art

statue of David (bronze, 1430s, National Museum, Florence) - the first image of a naked human body in the statuary plastic of the Renaissance. Working in Padua, Donatello created the first secular monument of the Renaissance - the equestrian monument to the condottiere Gattamelate (bronze, marble, limestone, 1447-1453) and a large sculptural altar for the church of Sant'Antonio (1446-1450), decorated with relief scenes masterfully deployed in an illusory space. Later, performed in Florence, the works of Donatello are sharply expressive, marked by features of a spiritual breakdown (the Judith and Holofernes group, bronze, circa 1456–1457, Piazza della Signoria; reliefs of the pulpits of the Church of San Lorenzo, bronze, 1460s). Donatello's influence on the development of Renaissance art in Italy was enormous, many painters and sculptors - P. Uccello, A. del Castagno, Mantegna, and later Michelangelo and Raphael - perceived his achievements.

  • History of the Middle Ages, Grade 6
We work according to the plan:
  • "Lovers of wisdom" and the revival of the ancient heritage.
  • New doctrine of man.
  • The upbringing of the new man.
  • The first humanists
  • Art of the Early Renaissance.
Task for the lesson:
  • Why did Italy become the birthplace of the emergence of a new era - the Renaissance?
Reasons for the emergence of a new culture.
  • rebirth
  • heyday
  • Italian
  • cities
  • Development of trade
  • and crafts
  • Development in cities
  • education
  • The aspiration of the townspeople
  • To learn more
"Lovers of wisdom" and the revival of the ancient heritage:
  • In the 14th century, in the rich cities of Italy, people appeared who called themselves "lovers of wisdom"
Knight literature
  • Renaissance, or Renaissance - an era in the history of European culture, which replaced the culture of the Middle Ages.
Knightly Literature:
  • The "Lovers of Wisdom" studied Latin and Greek. They searched for ancient statues and manuscripts, copied and studied works of ancient literature.
The new doctrine of man:
  • Humanism - worldview, in the center of which is the idea of ​​man as the highest value.
The first humanists
  • The first humanist is called the Italian poet Francesco Petrarca (1304-1374), who, against the will of his father, devoted his life to poetry and philosophy.
  • Francesco Petrarca
The first humanists
  • Once Petrarch saw a young woman in the church. He fell in love with her immediately and loved her all his life. She died of the plague in 1348, without responding to the poet in return.
  • Francesco and Laura
The first humanists
  • He was neither rich nor distinguished, but both popes and emperors listened to Petrarch's advice and even his harsh reproaches. In 1341, at a solemn ceremony in Rome, Petrarch was crowned with a laurel wreath and the title of King of Poets.
The first humanists
  • A student and follower of Petrarch was a writer and scientist Giovanni Boccaccio(1313-1375). His best and most famous work is The Decameron, a book of one hundred short stories.
  • Giovanni Boccaccio
  • Already from the early Renaissance in Europe, the flowering of art began. Painting, sculpture and architecture of the Renaissance are imbued with the ideals of humanism.
  • Palazzo Pitti
Early Renaissance Art:
  • The most remarkable painter of the early Renaissance is the Florentine Sandro Botticelli (1445-1510)
  • Sandro Botticelli
  • " Spring"
  • "Birth of Venus"
Art of the early Renaissance Summarize:
  • Tic-tac-toe game
Homework:
  • Paragraph 29, questions 5,6 or 7 in writing
Template author: Tatarnikov Vitaliy Viktorovich, teacher of physics, secondary school No. 20, Baranchinsky village, Kushva, Sverdlovsk region http://pedsovet.su/ - Drawing for the background http://17986.globalmarket.com.ua/data/530378_3.jpg - http://prosto-life.ru/prostyie-istorii/o-svyataya-prostota - pictures: - http://s51.radikal.ru/i132/0905/b8/170a8be0f4eb.jpg http://ru.wikipedia. org/wiki/%C3%F3%EC%E0%ED%E8%E7%EC http://i.obozrevatel.ua/8/796962/gallery/137642_image_large.jpg
  • Antonenkova Anzhelika Viktorovna
  • History teacher, MOU Budinskaya OOSh
  • Tver region

Grade 10 student S. Monko

The presentation on Renaissance art contains information and slides on this topic.

Download:

Preview:

To use the preview of presentations, create a Google account (account) and sign in: https://accounts.google.com


Slides captions:

Features of Renaissance Art

Renaissance (Renaissance) Renaissance - from the French "Renaissance" Revival of Antiquity The era of intellectual and artistic flowering, which began in Italy in the 14th century, reaching a peak in the 16th century

Renaissance ideas: Humanism (the humanistic ideal of a free, developed, self-improving personality) The idea of ​​national art Utopia (the image of an ideal world)

The great ancient experience of philosophy and art has been revived, and above all, the idea that "man is the measure of all things." Renaissance literature painting architecture

Renaissance literature The main representatives of the Renaissance in literature: Dante Alighieri Francesco Petrarca William Shakespeare Miguel de Cervantes

The development of genres in the Renaissance Early: Middle: Late: sonnet novel essay short story drama

Dante Alighieri (1265 - 1321) Italian poet, creator of the Italian literary language. The pinnacle of Dante's work is the poem "The Divine Comedy" (published in 1472) in three parts ("Hell", "Purgatory", "Paradise")

Francesco Petrarca (1304 - 1374) Italian poet, humanist, researcher of antiquity. Petrarch is the founder of the humanistic culture of the Renaissance, along with Dante, the creator of the Italian literary language. Francesco Petrarca is the creator of the sonnets.

Aphorisms and quotes by Francesco Petrarch To be able to express how much you love means to love little. He who has many vices has many masters. To seek power for peace and security is to climb a volcano in order to shelter from the storm.

William Shakespeare (1564 - 1616) English playwright and Renaissance poet.

Genres of Shakespeare's works: Chronicles ("Richard II") Comedies ("The Taming of the Shrew") Tragedies ("Romeo and Juliet") Tragicomedies ("Pericles, Prince of Tyre")

Miguel de Cervantes (1547-1616) Spain's greatest writer. The author of one of the first novels in the modern sense, "The Cunning Hidalgo Don Quixote of La Mancha"

Renaissance painting The main representatives of Renaissance painting: Leonardo da Vinci Vecellio Titian Albrecht Durer

Leonardo da Vinci (1452 - 1519) Italian painter, sculptor, scientist, engineer and architect of the Renaissance.

Famous works of Leonardo da Vinci "Gioconda" "Lady with an ermine"

Vecellio Titian (1485 - 1576) "King of painters and painter of kings" called Titian Vecellio, one of the greatest masters of world painting. His art is the most striking phenomenon of the Venetian school of the Italian Renaissance.

Famous works by Titian Vecellio "Penitent Mary "Flora" Magdalene"

Albrecht Durer (1471 - 1528) German painter and graphic artist. The founder of the art of the German Renaissance.

The famous works of Albrecht Dürer "Young Venetian" Madonna and Child "woman"

Renaissance architecture

Features of architecture Revival architecture grew in struggle with the old Gothic architecture. Main principles: symmetry of plans and compositions of buildings and uniform distribution, placement of all elements of the facade at equal intervals from each other. Internet resources: 1. Wikipedia; 2. http://smallbay.ru/renessitaly.html

« Quattrocento. Early Renaissance»- a presentation that will introduce the main achievements of the Early Renaissance in Italy. It is about three outstanding artists who are called the fathers of the Renaissance. These are the architect Brunelleschi, the sculptor Donatello and the painter Masaccio.

Quattrocento. Early Renaissance

Quattrocento. Early Renaissance

The year 1400 is called the Quattrocento in Italy. This is a very special time when the most powerful and richest people competed for the possession of the best works of art. Popes and dukes of the Italian city-republics sought to invite the best artists and poets to their court. Florence is considered to be the cradle of the Italian Renaissance. The rulers of this city, the richest bankers of Europe, the Medici, became patrons of the arts, gathering the most famous artists at their court.

The uniqueness of the Quattrocento era lies in the fact that art at that time became a universal means of knowledge. Discoveries were made in order to bring the image of objects closer to what is reflected in the mirror. It was the sculptor and architect Filippo Brunelleschi who was famous for discovering the laws of perspective, which were theoretically substantiated by the architect, mathematician, writer, philosopher Leon Batista Alberti, and in practice were used by Brunelleschi's friends, the painter Masaccio and the sculptor Donatello.

Filippo Brunelleschi

After an unsuccessful participation in the competition for the decoration of the doors of the Florentine baptistery, in which Lorenzo Ghiberti turned out to be the winner, Filippo Brunelleschi decided to go to Rome, where, together with his friend, the sculptor Donatello, he enthusiastically studied ancient monuments. Admiration for ancient sculpture and architecture did not prevent Brunelleschi from creatively using his observations, which he embodied in a truly Renaissance building. The arcade of the Orphanage on Piazza Annunziata in Florence combined a Roman arch and a Greek column, this arcade looks light and very harmonious. Usually at the lesson, I suggested that the children compare the appearance of the Gothic cathedral and the Brunelleschi Orphanage in relation to human proportions. This helped to demonstrate the embodiment of the idea of ​​humanism in architecture.

But this film has not been translated into Russian, but this does not prevent us from understanding what a wonderful masterpiece Filippo Brunelleschi created.

Donatello

The discovery of linear perspective made by Brunelleschi, his friend Donatello put into practice, creating his beautiful Renaissance sculptures. Donatello for the first time after a thousand-year medieval ban on the image of the nude creates his own David. He revives round sculpture, casts an equestrian monument to the condottiere Gattamelata in bronze, uses linear perspective to create numerous reliefs. On the site you will find information about Donatello with many illustrations

Masaccio

A young friend of Donatello and Brunelleschi, the artist Masaccio, became a revolutionary in painting. Not even having lived for thirty years, this painter picked up and developed what Giotto had started back in the era of the Proto-Renaissance. Using the discovery of his friend Brunelleschi, Masaccio creates the image of the "Trinity" in perspective, so skillfully that those looking at this work had the illusion of real space. Masaccio for the first time uses the portrait features of real people when depicting saints and biblical characters. The figures on the frescoes in the Brancacci Chapel in Florence are voluminous, thanks to the artist's masterful use of chiaroscuro.

You will find a continuation of the story about the Early Renaissance in Italy in the presentation

The presentation will acquaint you with the art of the greatest era in the history of art, not only Italian, but world.

At the end of my short story about outstanding artists Quattrocento I would like to offer a small book list for art:

  • Argan J.K. History of Italian Art. - M .: JSC Publishing House "Rainbow", 2000
  • Beckett V. History of painting. - M .: Astrel Publishing House LLC: AST Publishing House LLC, 2003
  • Vipper B.R. Italian Renaissance 13th - 16th century. - M.: Art, 1977
  • Dmitrieva N.A. Brief history of arts. From ancient times to the 16th century. Essays. - M.: Art, 1988
  • Emokhonova L.G. World Art. Textbook for students. Avg. Ped. Proc. Institutions. - M .: Publishing Center "Academy", 1988
  • Muratov P.P. Images of Italy. - M.: Respublika, 1994

I will be glad if my work is in demand!

All the best!

1
Renaissance

2
Renaissance - the era of the flourishing of culture in the countries of Western Europe in the 15-16th centuries. In its classical form, Renaissance culture developed in the cities of Northern and Central Italy. The Renaissance is characterized by a revival of interest in the literature, art, philosophy of ancient Greece and Rome. The real world and man were proclaimed the highest value: Man is the measure of all things. The aesthetic ideal of the Renaissance was formed on the basis of a new worldview - humanism (recognition of the value of the human person). The role of the creative person has especially increased.

3
Renaissance
Italian Renaissance 1. Proto-Renaissance (12th-13th centuries) 2. Early Renaissance (15th century) 3. High Renaissance (late 15th-early 16th century) 4. Late Renaissance (Tuesday, half of the 16th century) Northern Renaissance

4
Proto-Renaissance
Proto-Renaissance - a period in the history of Italian art, covering the 13th and 14th centuries, characterized by the growth of secular realistic tendencies and an appeal to ancient traditions. Giotto. Fresco "Kiss of Judas"

5

The era of joyful discovery of the world. Center - Florence. Architect Filippo Brunelleschi. The idea of ​​open space "ideal city".

6
Early Renaissance (15th century Quattrocento)
Donatello "David"
Masaccio "Expulsion from Paradise"

7
High Renaissance Leonardo da Vinci
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519), Italian painter, sculptor, architect, scientist and engineer. The founder of the artistic culture of the High Renaissance .. The artist, developing the traditions of the art of the Early Renaissance, emphasized the smooth volume of forms with soft chiaroscuro, sometimes enlivened faces with a barely perceptible smile, achieving with its help the transfer of subtle states of mind. Leonardo da Vinci achieved sharpness in the transfer of facial expressions, and brought the physical features and movement of the human body into perfect harmony with the spiritual atmosphere of the composition.

8
"Lady with an Ermine"
"Madonna in the Rocks" "Madonna Litta"

9
Leonardo da Vinci "The Last Supper"

10
High Renaissance Raphael
Raphael (1483-1520), Italian painter and architect. In his work, the humanistic ideas of the High Renaissance about a beautiful and perfect person living in harmony with the world, the ideals of life-affirming beauty characteristic of the era, were most clearly embodied in his work.

11
Madonna Conestabile
Sistine Madonna

12
High Renaissance Michelangelo Buonarroti
On the vault of the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican, the artist created a grandiose, solemn, easily visible in general and in detail composition, perceived as a hymn to physical and spiritual beauty, as a statement of the limitless creative possibilities of God and man created in his likeness.

13
"David" "Pieta"

14
Late Renaissance (Venice, 16th century)
Giorgione "Sleeping Venus" Titian "Venus of Urbino"

15
Northern Renaissance
A. Durer. Self-portrait at 13
Engraving "The Four Horsemen" from the cycle "Apocalypse"


Top