Pictures from Google Image Search

Renaissance art and architecture

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Renaissance art and architecture works of art and structures produced in Europe during the Renaissance .

Art of the Renaissance

The Italian Renaissance

A radical break with medieval methods of representing the visible world occurred in Italy during the second half of the 13th cent. The sculptor Nicola Pisano evoked an interest in the forms of classical antiquity. In painting Giotto led the way in giving the human figure a greater sense of physical presence. He also worked toward a more realistic depiction of space, and his efforts were expanded during the 14th cent. in Siena by the Lorenzetti brothers. However, after the Black Death of 1348 came a marked decline in artistic activity as many artists and patrons died.

Florence became the great center of quattrocento (15th-century) art and art theory. The artist began to emerge from the role of artisan to participate in the active current of intellectual pursuits. Together with early humanists (see humanism ), artists augmented their veneration of the purely celestial realm with an appreciation of all aspects of physical nature. They shared a growing esteem for the individual and a vital enthusiasm for classical antiquity. The architects Brunelleschi and Alberti and the sculptor Donatello were among the first to visit Rome in order to study the ruins of antiquity and to incorporate many of the ancient principles into their work.

At the same time artists were intensely preoccupied with problems of representing the dimensions of nature on a flat surface. With Masaccio they pioneered in developing a mathematically based illusion of space—the system of perspective . Masaccio and Uccello worked out a geometrical system, whereas Fra Angelico and Fra Filippo Lippi concentrated on a unifying color scheme. While the Florentines inclined toward an abstract simplicity of form, they never lost awareness of the visible world, particularly in their portrayal of the human figure. Antonio Pollaiuolo , Castagno , and above all Leonardo da Vinci were dedicated to the study of anatomy.

During the 15th cent. artists came to be supported not only by churchmen but also by private collectors. Besides commissioning paintings of the traditional sacred themes, these patrons created a new demand for pictures of secular subjects. For the embellishment of private palaces, painters adorned cassone (chest) panels, plates, and walls with allegorical and mythological episodes often derived from literary sources, such as the works of Petrarch and Boccaccio .

To fulfill the patrons' dreams of glory and perpetual fame, the art of portraiture began to flourish. In commemoration of notable citizens and events, medals were designed and struck by great metalworkers, such as Pisanello , in a revival of an ancient practice. Piero della Francesca , Mantegna , and Botticelli painted remarkable portraits of political leaders, at the same time emphasizing their individual characteristics and conveying an air of princely splendor. Chief among the Florentine patrons were the Medici , who fostered a group of poets, philosophers, and artists. Botticelli and Michelangelo were profoundly influenced by the Neoplatonic philosophy developed in the Medici circle.

Outside Florence there were bursts of artistic activity in Urbino, Mantua, Rimini, Milan, and Naples. Their courts attracted such artists as Piero della Francesca, Mantegna, Antonello da Messina , and Leonardo, as well as a number of Flemish artists who left their mark on N Italian painting. In the early 16th cent. the leadership in Italian art shifted from Florence to Rome. The works of Leonardo, Michelangelo, and Raphael were the culmination of the ideals of the period. These were the men who created the short-lived but glorious style now known as the High Renaissance (c.1490-1520), characterized by order, grandeur, grace, and harmony.

Their successors sought more diversified ideals, and the style known as mannerism followed. Meanwhile, by the beginning of the 16th cent., Venetian art had come into its full glory. The great colorists Giovanni Bellini and Giorgione were succeeded by Titian , Veronese , and Tintoretto , who added a new freedom of brushstroke to the canvas.

The Flemish Renaissance

The superb coloring of the Venetians was achieved as the effects of the golden age of painting in the Low Countries were felt across Europe. In the 1420s Hubert and Jan van Eyck developed an extremely effective technique of oil painting, and with it the ability to render the most subtle variations of light and color. They did not practice the system of geometric perspective, but nonetheless created a convincing appearance of reality. An exquisite sensitivity is reflected in their minute detailing of objects of daily life, which were often symbolic. Robert Campin (often identified with the Master of Flémalle), Roger van der Weyden , and Hugo van der Goes were among the most remarkable masters of 15th-century Flanders. Netherlandish painting was enriched by the wild fantasies of Hieronymus Bosch and the spirited peasant scenes of Pieter Bruegel the elder (see under Bruegel family).

German Art

In Germany, Schongauer and above all Dürer made the first and greatest contributions in the media of woodcuts and engravings. Other important German painters of the 16th cent. included Grünewald and Hans Holbein the younger. In addition, Lucas Cranach the elder straddled the Renaissance and the Reformation, producing mainly court portraits, altar pieces, and paintings.

Renaissance Art Elsewhere in Europe

Many artists in France continued to paint fine altarpieces in the Gothic tradition. Under the influence of Flemish and Italian art, France produced admirable portraitists such as Fouquet and Clouet . Francis I invited Italian painters and architects to his court, including Leonardo and Andrea del Sarto . In the 1530s the influence of mannerism began to be felt, particularly at Fontainebleau (see Fontainebleau, school of ). Artists in England and Spain were influenced by Netherlandish painting until the 16th cent., when the Italian Renaissance began to permeate Europe.

Architecture of the Renaissance

During the Renaissance the ideals of art and architecture became unified in the acceptance of classical antiquity and in the belief that humanity was a measure of the universe. The rebirth of classical architecture, which took place in Italy in the 15th cent. and spread in the following century through Western Europe, terminated the supremacy of the Gothic style.

Italian Renaissance Architecture

In Italy, there was a rediscovery and appropriation of the classical orders of architecture . Rome's structural elements, its arches, vaults, and domes, as well as its decorative forms, served as an open treasury, from which the designers of the 15th cent. unstintingly borrowed, adapting them to new needs in original combinations. Although built using Roman motifs, the churches, town halls, palaces, and villas showed new developments in plan and structure. The stone houses of Florence, of which the Medici-Riccardi Palace by Michelozzi is a principal example, are marked by a rugged simplicity. On the other hand, fondness for the free use of beautiful details led, particularly in Lombardy, to graceful designs, in which the more massive appearance of the building was submerged; the facade of the Certosa di Pavia exemplifies this spirit.

Brunelleschi, the earliest great architect of the Renaissance, produced its first examples (c.1420) in the Florentine churches of San Lorenzo and Santo Spirito and in the revolutionary plan for the dome of the Cathedral of Florence. Alberti was the first important architectural theoretician of the Renaissance. In his works he was strongly influenced by the writings of the ancient Roman architect Vitruvius ; the books of both men served as a basic source of inspiration for later architects. In ecclesiastical building there was a trend toward the centralized structure. Brunelleschi, Filarete , Francesco di Giorgio, and Leonardo designed many variations on the theme, creating polygonal and Greek-cross plans. The greatest realization of the circular form was achieved by Bramante in his Tempietto (c.1502) in Rome.

Numerous palaces and churches erected in Rome gave the city architectural preeminence, and Raphael, Peruzzi , Vignola , and Michelangelo worked there, as well as Antonio da Sangallo the younger, whose Farnese Palace exemplifies the period's highest standards. Work on St. Peter's Church was begun by Bramante and carried on by a succession of the finest artists and architects that Italy produced. The classical orders, often on a monumental scale, now played the chief role in decoration. Palladio , Serlio , Vignola, and others codified the system of proportioning, and their ideas were extremely influential in the development of European architecture.

French Architecture

In France in the 16th cent., Renaissance taste made one of its first tentative appearances in the Louis XII wing of the château of Blois. In the first period Gothic traditions persisted in plan, structure, and exterior masses, onto which fresh and graceful Renaissance details were grafted. The movement was sponsored by Francis I, a prolific builder. Handsome and livable châteaus replaced grim feudal castles. Fontainebleau , Chambord , and Azay-le-Rideau are famous examples.

The beginning (1546) of the construction of the Louvre by Pierre Lescot usually serves as the opening date of the classical period. Classical proportions and methods of composition were assimilated, and the use of the orders became general. Although Italian models were followed, a distinctively French brand of classicism took form. The leading architects were Lescot, Philibert Delorme , and the Androuet du Cerceau family. Jean Goujon and others contributed fine sculptural adornments.

Renaissance Architecture Elsewhere in Europe

In England the Renaissance flowered in the middle of the 16th cent. The Elizabethan style and the Jacobean style applied classical motifs while retaining medieval forms. The move toward a pure and monumental classical style was largely the work of Inigo Jones , whose royal banqueting hall (1619) in London decisively established Palladian design in English architecture.

In Germany, about the middle of the 16th cent., the medieval love for picturesque forms still dominated, although transferred to classical motifs. Freely interpreted and resembling the Elizabethan work in England, these gave full play to originality and craftsmanship. The style, however, lacking truly great architects, failed to achieve full development as in France and England. Nuremberg and Rothenburg ob der Tauber are rich in works of the early period.

In the first period of the Renaissance in Spain, Gothic and Moorish forms (see Mudéjar ) intermingled with the new classical ones. Under the leadership of Francisco de Herrera the younger, who imported strictly classical principles from Italy, the second period was one of correctness and formality. The palace of Charles V at Granada (1527) is its finest product.

Bibliography

See A. Blunt, Artistic Theory in Italy, 1450-1600 (1940, repr. 1982) and Art and Architecture in France, 1500-1700 (4th ed. 1980); E. H. J. Gombrich, Norm and Form (1966) and Symbolic Images (1972); R. Wittkower, Architectural Principles in the Age of Humanism (3d ed. 1962, repr. 1965); C. Gilbert, History of Renaissance Art (1973); S. J. Freedberg, Painting of the High Renaissance in Rome and Florence (2 vol., 1985); P. Murray, The Architecture of the Italian Renaissance (repr. 1986); C. Harbison, The Mirror of the Artist: Northern Renaissance Art in Its Historical Context (1995); L. Barkan, Unearthing the Past: Archaeology and Aesthetics in the Making of Renaissance Culture (2000).

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Renaissance art and architecture." The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. 9 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Renaissance art and architecture." The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. (November 9, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-Renaisart.html

"Renaissance art and architecture." The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Retrieved November 09, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-Renaisart.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

EARTHQUAKES:TERRY C. WALLACE
Transcript from: Congressional Testimony; 10/20/1999; 700+ words ; ...magnitude 7.0 earthquake occurred in...California. These earthquakes occurred in...of life from earthquakes is about 17...the deadliest earthquake of this decade...one of these earthquakes, the Turkey earthquake, and talk...
EARTHQUAKES HIGHLIGHT OHIO'S MANY FAULTS
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 1/23/2006; 700+ words ; ...and before that time earthquake data for Ohio was not...recorded a total of six earthquakes in the state, ranging...slip" and generate an earthquake. Most faults in Ohio...surface. Those who study earthquakes speculate that active...Ohio could generate an earthquake with a magnitude of...
EARTHQUAKE EDUCATION AND PREPARATION STORE OPENS IN GHIRARDELLI SQUARE
PR Newswire; 1/23/1996; 700+ words ; ...can be. A cut-away of an earthquake-resistant house provides...including fully assembled earthquake kits and a variety of long...Loma Prieta and Northridge earthquakes taught us the importance...The opening of the new Earthquake Outlet in Ghirardelli Square...
EARTHQUAKE FATALITIES HIGH IN 2008
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 1/6/2009; 700+ words ; ...of deaths from earthquakes in a year since...most destructive earthquake of 2008 occurred...The USGS National Earthquake Information Center...locates about 50 earthquakes per day, or about...2008, only 12 earthquakes reached a magnitude...higher, and no earthquake broke a magnitude...
EARTHQUAKE HAZARD REDUCTION EFFORTS:JOHN R. FILSON FEDERAL DOCUMENT CLEARING HOUSE, INC.
Transcript from: Congressional Testimony; 3/21/2001; 700+ words ; ...1. Very large earthquakes that occur on the...Type 2. Deep earthquakes, such as the Nisqually earthquake, occur internally...Very large Type I earthquakes are the most infrequent...the same kind of earthquake that struck Alaska...
EARTHQUAKE HAZARDS PROGRAM:DAVID APPLEGATE
Transcript from: Congressional Testimony; 5/22/2008; 700+ words ; ...Survey (USGS) Earthquake Hazards Program...that while earthquakes are inevitable...resilience to earthquakes and other...magnitude-7.9 earthquake that struck...prehistoric earthquakes, instrumental...historical earthquake catalogs generated...
Earthquakes - children may experience "psychological aftershocks."
PR Newswire; 4/28/1989; 700+ words ; EARTHQUAKES -- CHILDREN...Thursday's 4.7 earthquake along the New...research from earthquakes in California...disorder after an earthquake," according...quickest from earthquakes are those who...for treating earthquake-traumatized...
USGS: Earthquakes Less Frequent but Deadlier in 1997
Newspaper article from: U.S. Newswire; 12/31/1997; 700+ words ; ...death toll from earthquakes in 1997 is at...The deadliest earthquake of the year struck...to withstand earthquakes) exists that...destroyed in an earthquake. USGS estimates...several million earthquakes occur in the...
USGS: Earthquake Death Toll Still Below Long-term Average
Newspaper article from: U.S. Newswire; 1/7/1999; 700+ words ; ...The strongest earthquake in 1998, one of only two great earthquakes recorded in the...built to withstand earthquakes) exists that can be destroyed in an earthquake. USGS estimates that several million earthquakes occur in the world...
EARTHQUAKES:WAVERLY PERSON
Transcript from: Congressional Testimony; 10/20/1999; 700+ words ; ...USGS's National Earthquake Information Center...the recent large earthquakes and the lessons...earthquake and issuing earthquake announcements are...characterizing domestic earthquakes. In a domestic earthquake, however, the...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Earthquake
Encyclopedia entry from: The Gale Encyclopedia of Science Earthquake Causes of earthquakes Seismic waves Collapse...Historical incidence of earthquakes Resources An earthquake is the shaking or vibration...produce a magnitude 10 earthquake. The two largest recorded earthquakes were the magnitude 9...
Earthquakes, Measuring
Book article from: Mathematics ...intersect is the epicenter of the earthquake. Calculating Earthquake Odds Earthquakes are naturally recurring events...methods to predict when and where earthquakes might happen.* Earthquake probabilities are based on balancing...
earthquake mechanisms and plate tectonics
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to the Earth ...Earth's greatest earthquakes are the result of incremental...The largest known earthquake was the 1960, M 9...coast of Chile (see earthquake hazards and prediction and earthquake seismology ). Earthquakes that occur along or...
earthquake hazards and prediction
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to the Earth ...zones (see earthquake mechanisms and...occur in large earthquakes; these are...zone megathrust earthquakes. For example...1964 Alaskan earthquake, M 9.2...occurs in large earthquakes. Earthquake-induced landslides...
earthquake
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition ...from a powerful earthquake can trigger smaller earthquakes in a distant...Damage Caused by Earthquakes The effects of an earthquake are strongest...outward from the earthquake epicenter and...cities. Major Earthquakes On average about...