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Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance
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Italy:Birthplace of the Renaissance

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Renaissance

• Renaissance’ means rebirth new period of learning and creativity

• 1300-1600

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Northern Italy

• Largely considered where the Renaissance began

• Lots of good ol $$$$• Trade helped fuel “R”• Increased trade more get wealthy• Increased trade more want luxury goods

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It was primarily the northern Italian city-states that dominated the Italian Renaissance. The central and southern cities remained backwards.

• Note that each city-state, was independent of the others. Also, they controlled the surrounding region.

• They would sometimes go to war with each other.

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Florence is the city-state in which the Renaissance was most prominent.

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Florence and Medici’s• The Medici’s were the most

powerful of all Italian families

• Primarily b/c of the skill of Cosimo Medici.

• Cosimo was brilliant political and businessman

• Used huge fortune for political power and finance art projects

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Florence and Medici’s• After Cosimo dies, his grandson

Lorenzo takes power

• Lorenzo is known as Lorenzo the Magnificent

• And why was Lorenzo magnificent?

• Sponsored lots of art and literature with the Medici fortune.

• Some artists who enjoyed his patronage - Leonardo, Michelangelo, and Donatello.

• Started schools that studied ancient works

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The renaissance man• To be a universal man (or

Renaissance man), like Lorenzo here, you were going to become expert in song, dance, and poetry.

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Swoon, ladies.

Swoon.

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Classic Fever

• Once the “R” started – people looked for the ancient classics

• Many were gathering dust in monasteries• Muslim culture also had some “saved”• Some came from sacking of Constantinople

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Beginning of Humanism

• All of these classics lead to “humanisim”• Humanism focused on what humans could do• Liked the finer things: entertainment, art, good food,

good company, etc• People were tired of the Black Death• Life was too short not to enjoy

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The new art• The “R” sees all types of new art

• Medieval art tended to be very flat and nearly always had religious overtones.

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The new art• “R” art is different• Perspective is the biggest advancement• When you look at a scene, parallel lines seem to get closer to each

other the farther in the distance they go until they meet at a vanishing point. Think of standing on a railroad track and looking down them

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The new art• Renaissance artists started exploiting this optical illusion in their art.

The advantage of it is that you created the illusion of a three dimensional image on a flat, two dimensional surface

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• Interestingly, perspective can also be used as to create false perspective, such as here.

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• Or in M.C. Escher’s works (though he wasn’t Renaissance).

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You also start to see the use of light and shade (chiaroscuro) and blurring outlines so it seems that tones imperceptibly meld in to each other (thereby creating volume: this is sfumato).

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Carvaggio’s Crucifixion of St. Peter. An example of Chiaroscuro.

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Close-up of Mona Lisa’s face. Notice the sfumato blurring, especially around the eyes, and how it creates a 3D illusion.

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• You also see a renewed interest in some classical forms in sculpture that are at the same time using realism.

• Examples are Donatello’s bronze David and Michelangelo’s marble David.

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• Even Lorenzo got into it:

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• There’s also a greater plasticity and animation to the characters in the paintings. They feel like they’re in mid-movement and not just in some stone-like pose.

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• Architecture changed during the Renaissance too.

• It was more symmetrical and centrally planned than Gothic architecture was.

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• The dome of the basilica reaches 448 ft. The Statue of Liberty, from the ground to the tip of the torch, is 305 ft.

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• There’s also the Sistine Chapel. Not much to look at from the outside:

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• But inside…

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