from medieval to renaissance: italy, 1200-1400. compare byzantine (left) style and content with high...

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From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400

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Page 1: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

From Medieval to Renaissance:Italy, 1200-1400

Page 2: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri, Saint Francis Altarpiece, 1235 and

(right) Raphael, Baldassare Castiglione, ca 1514, mastered illusionism

Page 3: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Compare (left) High Italian Renaissance Raphael, Baldassare Castiglione, ca 1514, mastered illusionism with Vincent Van Gogh, Dutch Modernist, Portrait

Dedicated to Paul Gauguin, 1888

Page 4: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Compare Van Gogh (1888) Expressionism with Pablo Picasso (Spanish) Portrait of Vollard, 1910, “School of Paris” Cubism

Page 5: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

http://www.moma.org/audio_file/audio_file/82/411e.mp3 Andy Warhol, (US Pop Art), Gold Marilyn, 1962

Page 6: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Map of the Word in 2009

Page 7: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Italy Around 1400

Page 8: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Roman Forum. Italian Renaissance humanists – artists, writers, architects – were inspired by Greco-Roman literature and art, evident in ruins of

classical culture that were part of their landscape.

Page 9: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

BONAVENTURA BERLINGHIERI, panel from the Saint Francis Altarpiece, San Francesco,

Pescia, Italy, 1235. Tempera on wood, approx. 5’ x 3’ x 6”. A leading painter in the Italo-

Byzantine style. Frontal pose and use of gold leaf show his

Byzantine sources.

Byzantine icon, St Nicholas, early 13th C. Greece

Page 10: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

NICOLA PISANO, pulpit of Pisa Cathedral baptistery, Pisa, Italy, 1259–1260. Marble, approx. 15’ high. This is a hybrid medieval (trefoil arches, lion

bases), and classical (relief sculptures drawing from Roman and Greek

sources).

Page 11: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

NICOLA PISANO, The Annunciation and the Nativity, detail of Pisa baptistery pulpit, Pisa, Italy, 1259–1260. Marble relief, approx. 2’ 10” x 3’ 9”.

Page 12: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Compare Nicola Pisano’s Late Gothic/Early Renaissance marble relief (above) with Roman relief sculpture of the myth of Orestes, ca. 140–150 CE. Marble, 2’ 7 1/2” high.

Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland.

Page 13: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

GIOVANNI PISANO, The Annunciation and the Nativity, detail of the pulpit of Sant’Andrea, Pistoia, Italy, 1297–1301. Marble relief, approx. 2’ 10” x 3’ 4”.

Page 14: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

CIMABUE (“Bull’s Head”), Madonna Enthroned with Angels and Prophets, ca.

1280–1290. Tempera on wood, 12’ 7” x 7’ 4”. Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence. One of the first artists to break with the Italo-Byzantine style. A summary of Byzantine style, but the

throne recedes into space. Spatial illusionism is a hallmark of Renaissance

representation.

Page 15: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

GIOTTO DI BONDONE, Madonna Enthroned, ca. 1310. Tempera on wood, 10’ 8” x 6’ 8”. Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence. Called the "Father

of Western Painting” why?

Empirical art: “[Giotto’s] trueteacher was nature.”

Page 16: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Compare Cimabue and Giotto. Is Giotto’s style more empirical?

Page 17: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Roman maternal goddess, panel from the east facade of the Ara Pacis Augustae, Rome, Italy, 13–9 BCE. Marble, approx. 5’ 3” high. Compare Giotto (1310) for solidity of the

body, a body that has weight.

Page 18: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Giotto, Interior of the Arena Chapel (Cappella Scrovegni),

Padua, Italy, 1305–1306. Fresco panels of the life of the Virgin

(top) and the life of Christ (center and lower)

Page 19: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

GIOTTO DI BONDONE, Lamentation, Arena Chapel, Padua, Italy, ca. 1305. Fresco, 6’ 6 3/4” x 6’ 3/4” What is fresco (method and medium)? Illusionism and expression

Page 20: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Anonymous Byzantine artist, Lamentation over the Dead Christ, wall painting, Saint Pantaleimon, Nerezi, Macedonia, 1164.

Compare Byzantine Lamentation (above)with Giotto’s early Renaissance Lamentation on the right, ca 1305

Page 21: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Sculptor ARNOLFO DI CAMBIO and others, Florence Cathedral (Santa Maria del Fiore, view from the south), Florence, Italy, begun 1296. Campanile (free-standing bell

tower) by Giotto. Dome by Filippo Brunelleschi was built in the early 15th century.

Page 22: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Compare Florence Cathedral (above) begun 1296 with the Cologne cathedral (left) begun 1248.

Page 23: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Nave of Amiens Cathedral (view facing east), Amiens, France, begun

1220.

Nave of Florence Cathedral (view facing east), Florence, Italy, begun 1296.

Page 24: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Palazzo Pubblico, Siena, Italy, 1288–1309

Page 25: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Palazzo Pubblico, Siena, Italy, 1288–1309

Page 26: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Ambrogio Lorenzetti, Peaceful City, detail from Effects of Good Government in the City and in the Country, Sala della Pace, Palazzo Pubblico, Siena, Italy, 1338–

1339. Fresco.

Page 27: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Ambrogio Lorenzetti, Peaceful Country, detail from Effects of Good Government in the City and in the Country, Sala della Pace, Palazzo Pubblico, Siena, Italy, 1338–1339.

Fresco. The first “real” (empirical) landscape painting – a portrait of a place.

Siena was decimated by the Black Death in 1348. Approximately half the population died in the plague. The republic's economy was destroyed and the city-state quickly declined from its position of prominence in Italy.

Page 28: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,
Page 29: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

The Triumph of Death, 1325-50, Fresco, 18’6”x49’2”, Camposanto, Pisa

Page 30: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

The Camposanto (sacred field), cemetery, Pisa, Italy

Page 31: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Francesco Traini (?) or Buonamico Buffalmacco (?), The Three Living, detail from The Triumph of Death,

fresco, 1325-50, 18’6” x 49’2” Camposanto, Pisa

Page 32: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Corpses, detail from The Triumph of Death fresco, Camposanto, Pisa

Page 33: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Detail from The Triumph of Death, c. 1325-50, Camposanto, Pisa

Page 34: From Medieval to Renaissance: Italy, 1200-1400. Compare Byzantine (left) style and content with High Renaissance (right) (left) Bonaventura Berlinghieri,

Detail from Triumph of Death, c. 1348, Santa Croce, Florence. The Catholic Church intensified preaching of guilt and penance following the Black Death.