Italian Renaissance Art

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The Italian Renaissance is one of the most well-known periods of Western civilization. One of its defining characteristics is the evolution of artistic expression; artistic works derived from this period are some of the most everlasting examples of human creativity. The development of artistic techniques during the Italian Renaissance – and their influence upon future artists – can perhaps be best paralleled with modern works of art from the twentieth century onwards. Furthermore, how we uphold those who create modern expressions of art is almost akin to how Renaissance citizens viewed artists of their time. Because of these reasons, there is ample reason to believe that we are experiencing a second artistic Renaissance.
The Italian Renaissance is responsible for producing some of the most beautiful artworks humanity has ever seen. The Early Renaissance brought forth artists such as Masaccio, who utilized a technique known as frescoing for artworks created for the Brancacci Chapel of Florence; Florentine painters would adopt this style as the fifteenth century progressed (Spielvogel, pg. …show more content…

Whereas artistic innovation was once solely due to the works of Masaccio, da Vinci, and many other Renaissance artisans, names such as Pablo Picasso and Salvador Dalí have overshadowed them. New art styles, such as cubism and surrealism, have overshadowed frescoing and applying sfumato (Anderson; “Fresco painting”; “Sfumato”). Artists of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries have influenced and inspired patrons of the arts in the same manner that Italian Renaissance artists have. Italian Renaissance artists focused on perspective and anatomy looking as realistic as possible; artists of the last two centuries, however, have focused on skewing and changing the proportion of their subjects as much as they can to develop an intriguing, distinctive

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