Saturday, 17 November 2012

The Renaissance

Assignment #7:



The Renaissance began in Italy in the 14th Century.  By the 16th Century it spread to the North, including England, and ended in the mid-17th Century.  The Renaissance affected literature, philosophy, music, politics, science, religion, art, and other aspects in culture.  Renaissance artists searched for realism and human emotion in their art through the development of perspective, light, shadow, and human anatomy.   The artists desired to depict the beauty of nature by developing a manner of painting that was unpredictably naturalistic, 3-D, life-like, and classicising.   Artists incorporated a greater sense of light and colour through new mediums.  Some techniques that they used were:  Humanism and Perspective - Where the idea of perspective it to create a three-dimensional appearance on a two-dimensional object.   Sfumato - The idea was to blend one shade into another to create the appearance of depth, form and volume.  Chiaroscuro - Using the contrast of light and dark to create dimension.  There are many more techniques, and these techniques are still known and used in modern day.  Giiotto was one of the first to paint in this new style.  Giotto's paintings began to show real emotion, perspective and solidity.  Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo are also famous artist of this time, with their work still famous around the world.  The ideas and techniques of these artists were copied and improved upon by other artist ad inventors.  This really improved and expanded the sense of artistry and the overall affect of art in the world at that time. It turned art into more than just a craft.  It turned art into what it is today. A lifestyle.  It changed the spectator's view of art from just a show of skills to a telling of a story. 

                The original painting Ginevra de'Benei by Leonardo Da Vinci.  Givevra de'Benei was an aristocrat from 15th-century Florence, and the portrait was painted to commemorate her marriage.   "This portrait of Ginevra shows the female with a marble-like skin and hair styled in ringlets framing a face portraying a sulky and proud facial expression."   She was 17 and her fiancé was twice her age.   It is a significant painting for Leonardo Da Vinci because his paintings were so rare.   The alabaster smoothness of her face was an effect that Leonardo accomplished by smoothing the surface of the paint with his own hands.  Leonardo was the first painter to have the perfect control over his medium to achieve the look of light and shade to merge them imperceptibly.   A juniper bush can be seen in the background of the portrait, which makes sense as 'Ginevra' in Italian means juniper.  On the back of the painting is a 'heraldic motif' that includes a sprig of juniper encircled by a wreath of laurel and palm.  This painting is the first psychological portrait ever painted and one of the first three-quarter or frontal view of the sitter.  Leonardo's innovation was developed during his painting of 4 women, where each woman expresses different moods.   In this painting, Leonardo shows us the 'enigmatic melancholy' of Ginevra de 'Benei.  Sadness had rarely been represented in portraiture before the 17th century, and even then, the tragic view of life was usually conveyed through portraits of men, not women.   

                Leonardo da Vinci was (and still is) one of the most famous Renaissance painters.  He was born in 1452 in the village of Vinci, and began his career working for a master painter in Florence.  As Leonardo's fame grew, he was recognized as truly a "Renaissance Man", being skilled in many fields; he as a scientist, an inventor, as well as an artist.  He had major influences in the design of hydraulics, mechanical engineering, structural engineering, and advanced weaponry all used during this time period.  He also influenced science and mathematics in his use of geometry and his diagrams of the human anatomy (which were illegal at the time), bringing knowledge in medical science which were used then, as well into modern times.  As an artist, he rejected using the medium of tempera paints, and chose oil instead.  Contrary to the beliefs previous artists, Leonardo discovered that objects were not comprised of outlines, but were 3-D, defined by light and shadow.  He also used perspective, and saw that an object's detail and colour changed as it receded into the distance.  As a perfectionist, he sought out the 'ideal; human figure through studies of the physical proportions of men, women, and children.  Today, Leonardo's paintings are displayed and admired all over the world, inspiring aspiring artists to break the rules a little, and open their minds to infinite possibilities.   

Original Painting:


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