In the article “Conditions of Trade,” Michael Baxandall explains that fifteenth-century Italian art is a “deposit” resulting from the commercial interaction between the artist and the purchaser, who he refers to as a client. These works, as such, are “fossils of economic life,” and money, and they play an important role in the history of art. In our current perception of the relationship between the artist and art, “painters paint what they think is best, and then look around for a buyer” . However in the past, especially during the Renaissance period, the customers determined the content and form of paintings, as it was them who commissioned the work before it was created. He states that the artists and clients were interconnected and a legal agreement was drawn up specifying subject matter, payment scheme and the quality and quantity of colors, which would influence the artist’s painting style. Baxandall not only looks at the explanation of the style of painting that reflects a society, but also engages in the visual skills and habits that develop out of daily life. The author examines the situations between the painter and client within the commercial, religious, perceptual, and social institutions, centrally focusing on markets, materials, visual practices, and the concept of the Renaissance period, which saw art as an institution. Baxandall notes that Renaissance paintings also relate to the clients’ motives through such ways as possession, self-commemoration, civic consciousness, and self-advertisement. The author considers works of a wide variety of artistic painters, for instance, Filippo Lippi, Fra Angelico, Stefano di Giovanni, Sandro Botticelli, Luca Signorelli, and numerous others. He defines and exemplifies fiftee... ... middle of paper ... ...laced on the style and materials presented in the painting. While evaluating and comparing various paintings the author feels that at the beginning of the Renaissance era the skill level of the artist was often not acknowledged whereas materials were, but at the end of the era, skill level played a larger factor in who was chosen to complete the artwork. Therefore, fresco painting, which emerged near the end of the period, changed this so called “deposit”, along with the relationship of the artist and the patron, allowing for the talent and skill of the artist to shine. Reference Baxandall, Michael. “Conditions of Trade.” Painting and Experience in Fifteenth-century Italy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988. Reference Baxandall, Michael. “Conditions of Trade.” Painting and Experience in Fifteenth-century Italy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988.
Baxandall, Michael. “Conditions of Trade.” Painting and Experience in Fifteenth-century Italy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988.
The paintings by Duccio and Giotto firmly set in place a benchmark for where artwork in the years around 1300 began to develop. These artworks show how paintings began to evolve into more symbolic, naturalistic, and dramatic scenes, depicting events in life and religion. The paintings of Duccio and Giotto are similar in the sense that their paintings were then, in the sense of more modern words, “special effects” of their time. They show vivid colors with meaning and symbolism, atmospheric characters that exist in space, and composition that is well thought out. Overall, these two artists become a pinnacle of art that illustrates Italian paintings in the years around 1300.
To conclude, at first, it may seem logical for one to hold Giovanni Bellori to be true; believing that Caravaggio truly was an innovative painter, due to his usage of realism, tenebrism and lack of linear perspective. However, these claims are simply inaccurate, as multiple artists had already performed such feats, including Northern Europeans such as Durer, and Mannerists such as Tintoretto. Therefore one must realize that Bellori’s statement cannot be an entirely valid assumption. Yet, one must not forget, that at the same time, Giovanni happens to be correct in his assumption that Caravaggio’s lack of Rubenesque vibrancy helps to liven up his imagery. All in all, though Caravaggio was quite effective in his employment of Bellori’s aforementioned “advances”, none of these prove to be unique from the artworks and styles preceding him.
Johnson, Geraldine A. Renaissance Art, A Very Short Introduction. New York: Oxford University Press, 2005.
Giotto di Bondone (1266-1337) is widely considered to be the father of florentine painting, and indeed even the originator of the rebirth of Italian painting of the Trecento period. His style and genius permeated the social consciousness in the late 13th and early 14th Centuries and persisted to influence and inspire the work of great masters of the age and continued to affect the face of Italian painting right up to 15th Century and beyond. His followers, known as the Giotteschi, were those influential artists who were emulated by Bondone and sought to emulate his genius through their own works. Giotto’s incredible range of works and the speed at which he created them force us to recognise that the use of assistants and pupils for the completion was commissions was a frequent occurrence and we can clearly see the hand of illustrious students such as Maso di Banco and Taddeo Gaddi in several of the old master’s works. Giotto single-handedly redirected the entire conception of form and narrative away from the iconic, highly formal Duecento tradition, and thus rendered the prospect of artists trying to return to the previous stylistic form nearly impossible. It was this revolutionary impact on the world of art that Giotto’s followers responded to so emphatically. Followers such as Bernardo Daddi, Jacopo del Casentino and Masaccio admired several key innovations instigated by the Master and carried it through into their own works long after the time of Bondone.
In his Introduction to the work of Vasari, George Bull gives a detailed overview of how Lives was influenced by the historical circumstances in 16th century Italy, with particular reference to the newly established role of the artist in society. Although written significantly after Vasari's own work, the introduction given
Fiero, Gloria. "Renaissance Artists: Disciples of Nature, Masters of Invention." Intercultural Humanities: Medieval, Renaissance, and Reformation. Unknown: McGraw Hill, 2013. 202-223, 227-228, 261-263, 277-284. Print.
Europe in the 15th Century depended on Italy for much of its commerce. Italy itself was made up of city-states in which power was shared by leading families. By 1400 its leading city-state, Florence, had established stable self-government and great wealth through textile trading and banking, leading to a shared feeling of optimism and power. Responsible for the wealth of Florence, the ruling class of merchants, manufacturers and bankers were proud, competitive, academically curious and culturally astute.
There are many similarities and differences in the art work from Italy and other European cities during the 15th and 16th century. Some of the difference and similarities can be found in the area of content and form from works of art during this time. Works of art from Matthias Grunewald, Masaccio, Albrecht Durer and Antonia Del Pollaiuolo along with Robert Smythson show ways in which media, iconology, and subject matter, along with composition and expression are also areas in which works of art from this time can be similar but yet so different.
The objective of this essay is to provide an explanation of Leonardo da Vinci’s life and work as an artist in context with his time spent in Milan. Following an initial introduction to Leonardo’s formative years in Florence (and his apprenticeship to the sculptor and painter Andrea del Verrocchio, 1435-88), I will attempt to explain the significance of his presence in Milan with detailed descriptions of his work there. Giorgio Vasari (1511-74) was also an artist and architect, but is perhaps better known for his book on the lives of well known painters, sculptors and architects (published 1550; from Cimbue to his autobiography which was included in a revised edition):
The following is a comparative analysis of Caravaggio’s The Musicians from the Italian Baroque period, and Watteau’s Mezzetin from the Rococo Period. Although both paintings depict a scene or event from everyday life, or a genre scene, the latter was painted more recently during the modern era and it differs immensely. The major differences become evident in the style of the painters as well as their personal representations of the subject matter. The works illustrate the evolvement of a certain genre in Western painting from Renaissance through the modern era. This transformation exemplifies how a similar subject matter can be represented in an entirely new and innovative way.
The bizarrely suggestive painting, Allegory with Venus and Cupid, seems to tick all the boxes of the formal definition of Mannerism. This exquisitely crafted oil on wood panel by Agnolo di Cosimo or “Bronzino,” must have been received with delight when gifted to King Francis I by Branzino’s commissioner, Duke Cosimo de’ Medici. For this work to be a diplomatic gift between Italy and France it must have been held in the highest esteem by the Italian Mannerist movement.
The Medici appeared as the first important bourgeoisie family, which supported the artists, writers and philosophers, in the history. However, we cannot consider the Medici as another ordinary bourgeoisies lived at the same time with them because their fortune and political power could not be compared with other bankers, merchants and higher classes of the society. The beginning of their dynasty accelerated the Italian Renaissance, especially in Florence. During the reign of Cosmo and Lorenzo de’ Medici, the Republic of Florence was transformed into the center of finance and trade of the world and also many of the most significant examples of the arts of classical antiquity like architecture and sculpture were generated under the patronage of the Medici family. In addition to these developments, new art forms like oil painting acquired importance and appreciation.Although the renaissance or ‘reborn’ spirit had started to be generated in Italy before the Medici, their impact and influence on the era cannot be underestimated.
Additionally, the styles changed; from Rococo, which was meant to represent the aristocratic power and the “style that (…) and ignored the lower classes” (Cullen), to Neoclassicism, which had a special emphasis on the Roman civilization’s virtues, and also to Romanticism, which performs a celebration of the individual and of freedom. Obviously, also the subject matter that inspired the paintings has changed as wel...
Larmann, R., & Shields, M. (2011). Art of Renaissance and Baroque Europe (1400–1750). Gateways to Art (pp. 376-97). New York: W.W. Norton.