Italian Renaissance Art

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The word “Renaissance” comes from the French and means rebirth, the rebirth of ancient learning. In Post-Colonial Studies, by Bill Ashcroft it stated, “A key factor of the development of Renaissance art was how the artist, as a creator, looked for heightened knowledge and imagination. Art became valued; not only as a way for artists to express religious and social themes, but also as a mode of personal, appreciative expression. Artists’ were viewed as geniuses and the art produced by divine intervention.” The Renaissance witnessed the discovery and exploration of new continents. To people today, the Renaissance was primarily a time of the revival of classical learning and wisdom after a long period of cultural decline and stagnation. The …show more content…

It was the basic concept of Italian Renaissance. Neal Ward Gilbert in Renaissance concepts of methods said, “It is the term used to define that philosophical movement in Italy at the end of the 14th century and during the 15th and 16th centuries which asserted the right of the individual to use of his own reason and belief, and stressed the importance and potential of an individual. This concept can be identified with a belief in the power of learning and science to produce ‘the complete man’.” Modern Humanism originated in the Renaissance when scholars, writers, poets, artists, philosophers and scientist searched for regeneration in the spirit of classical times. Clearly, the Renaissance was huge in the concept of learning and philosophical …show more content…

Dorothy Koenigsbeger stated in her text Renaissance man and creating thinking; a history of concepts of harmony, “In the Renaissance, another school of classical learning was coterminous and was finally reconciled with Neo-Platonism, called Aristotelianism.” It is the conception of the visible world as ultimate reality. The concept of beauty in a work of art is the harmony between all the parts so that nothing can be added to it or taken from it without impairing the whole. Dorothy also said, “Leonardo da Vinci, always the scientist, even when a painter, was the chief exponent of the Aristotelian concept.” Aristotelian can be summarized as adding to the art, but not taking away from the painting as a whole. Obviously, Aristotelian was a concept from the

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