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What Major Developments Were Made In Art

In The Period 1400-1650? Essay, Research Paper


At the beginning of this era, a synthesis of local styles known as the ?International Style? predominated Europe?s art and the


Gothic style was dominant in architecture. This era also began in the shadow of the person sometimes seen as the precedent of the great Italian Renaissance masters.? His frescoes, notably those in the Cappella dell? Arena in Padua used the concepts of Byzantine art that


governed ideas of foreshortening, shadow and texture to create the illusion of depth.? Giotto?s mastery had recreated


the concept of depth on a flat surface, and the slow progress to what we


recognise as Renaissance art occurred throughout the fourteenth century. One of


the finest pieces of International Style art is the Wilton Diptych, which dates


from 1400 and portrays the commending of Richard II by St. Edmund, St. Edward


the Confessor and St John the Baptist to the Christ Child. A love of detail is


evident from the painstaking way in which fingers, flowers and even the


Infant?s feet are marked out in loving detail. The artist took a fractal


approach to the painting, trying to add realism to his scene by adding layer


upon layer of detail to the figures.?


The foreshortening of limbs and bodies in the painting is testament to


Giotto?s influence and the figures themselves have a reasonable deal of realism


to them, even if the painting overall does not.? The flowers across the picture are typical of the pre-Renaissance


fascination with the delicate and beautiful, and the diptych shows a great


power of observation, but the early date of the painting is clear when we look


at the background, and the way that space is portrayed within the picture. ?The gilded


background was a show of wealth in a space that usually lay redundant in


paintings of this era, as at the time, a high calibre means of representing


space had not yet been discovered. The gilded background would have been


massively expensive, as would the ultramarine pigments used so freely, notably


upon the dress of the figure of the Virgin Mary. The Renaissance era is usually seen as starting at


the point when artists ceased to be interested in telling a story so much as in


portraying nature and collecting studies of the world. These achieved, they


moved on to exploring the laws of vision and the way in which the viewer


perceives the world.? They began to


study the human body with a view to enhancing their ability to portray it both


in stone and in paint, as their classical forebears had done.? The ?Greek artists of the fifth century were


mainly concerned in how to build up the image of the beautiful body? whilst to


the Gothic artists, all their skill and tricks were merely ?means to an end,


which was to tell a sacred story more movingly and more convincingly[1]?.? The rise of Petrarch, who had become a


?classic? author even by this early stage, and the pre-eminence of humanism had


led to a resurgence of respect for the classical world that we see reflected


across the Renaissance world.? Renewed


awareness of Italy?s great past led to renewed interest in some kind of revival


of the ancient arts.? The millennium


that lay between the fall of Rome and their time was to them merely a sad


interlude in Italy?s greatness.? Giotto?s art and the art it spawned for a century


afterwards had its roots in the artist?s genius in blending the concepts of the


rigid Byzantine school into a combination with the precepts of the Italianate


school, but further progress would require another genius. His reputation


established with Florence Cathedral, Brunelleschi went on to spearhead a


revival of Roman forms in architecture.?


He did not intend to copy Roman architecture, nor rebuild Italy in the


ancient model, but to use Roman ideals to create new modes of harmony and


beauty, using columns, pediments and pilasters.? Although rightly remembered as a great architect,


Brunelleschi?s mathematical methods used for his engineering were transferred


by his artist friends to painting and thus created what we today call


?perspective?.? Vitally, this


mathematical model for the appearance of reality was far beyond the


achievements of the ancient Greek artists.?


Pioneered in Masaccio?s celebrated ?The Holy Trinity, the Virgin, St.


John and Donors,? the painting?s background, instead of being a static


scene, a gilded backdrop or an ultramarine wash, shows a realistic transept


chapel in Brunelleschi?s new style using perspective.? The Florentine reaction to this painting, which appeared to have


created a hole in the wall into a new burial chamber, was shocking due to its


heavy, solemn figures and the lack of daintiness to which they had become


accustomed.? The innovation of


perspective so dramatically introduced by Masaccio, a genius who was dead by


the age of 28, was the most dramatic break with the past conceivable.? Introducing the ability to represent space


into paintings is as big a break with the past as is imaginable. It took some


rime for the Italianate trend to spread, where the Gothic architectural style


continued to flourish.? In northern Europe,


the fifteenth century opened clearly favouring the High Gothic decorative


style, a taste clearly visible at the Palace of Justice at Rouen and Exeter


Cathedral.? Just as the Italians began


to revolt against the Gothic style, the century saw a reaction against


complicated and heavy architecture.?


King?s College Chapel, Cambridge (1446), is an excellent example of the


reactionary ?Perpendicular? gothic style. The Burgundian court at Dijon was also producing


work in reaction to the old Gothic trend.?


Not as radical as Masaccio, Jan van Eyck?s style in the 1430s was of the


lineage of his local forebears, but when introduced to perspective, van Eyck


broke new boundaries.? His celebrated


portrait of ?The Betrothal of the Arnolfini? with its mirror reflecting


not only Arnolfini and his bride but also van Eyck himself, shows the painter


as witness and person.? In essence, van


Eyck acknowledges that he is painting what he saw, to the extent of even


leaving in his own impression.? The


subject, a betrothal, is also great naturalism. Despite the efforts of the van Eyck brothers, the


medieval spirit reigned throughout Northern Europe at this time.? Perspective, realism and classical influence


did not trouble the northern masters.?


The preoccupation with the skill of the artist as an expense incurred by


the patron, so evident from the sums paid to Italian masters, is not clear from


the works in the north where ultramarine and gold were still the greatest


expenses troubling northern patrons and impressed contemporaries.? Although Lochner uses perspective timidly in


the Fra Angelico style, contemporary northern work at this time tended to


compare more easily with such work as the Wilton Diptych. Depite the guilds? inadvertent prevention of


dissemination of ideas, it did occur, as on Fouquet?s trip to Italy, where he


painted the Pope and picked up Italian Renaissance ideas.? Whilst still painting on the same theme as


the Wilton Diptych, Fouquet?s image looks less like a collage but more like a


real representation of the event.? Light


and shade, perspective and distance ? all new elements to the north, and all


imported there from Italy.? Yet the


synthesis was not all Italian.? Whilst


Piero was a great Master and had a great interest in light and shade, the van


Eycks? influence is clear from the attention to detail of the textures ?


probably a by-product of the gothic fascination with delicate detail. A contemporary of Masaccio, Donatello was another


leader of the Renaissance.? His


celebrated statue of St. George differs concertedly from the Gothic art that it


was displayed alongside.?? Instead of


heightening the building by accentuation of the height of the alcoves and using


dainty lacework, Donatello aims to restore the art of sculpture to a


representative art form based on the Greek ideals.? Instead of telling the story of St. George by reference to dragon


motifs under his feet, or other such devices that might have occurred earlier,


Donatello?s statue is concerned with portraying the saint as a man gazing at


his enemy and ready for battle.? As


opposed to the serene and vague expressions of the gothic statues of the


decorative style, Donatello?s George is determined, unyielding and brimming


with vim, vigour and vitality.? Just as


Brunelleschi set the tone for architecture for centuries to come, Donatello and


Masaccio set the tone for the coming centuries with their use of a new and


vigorous observation of nature.?


Burckhardt claimed that this period?s natural interest was indicative of


man?s new autonomy and command of the natural world, but this seems a little


oversimplified and is probably just a reflection of 19th century


liberal romanticism and pastoralism. This observation of the world was encouraged by


collectors such as Aldorandi who saw himself as clarifying and classifying the


universe by collecting.? Imperato of


Naples won status by showing off his collection, and saw himself as a Noah


figure, rescuing the forms of nature.?


Patrons were also happy to push for natural observation as a skill.? Maximillian II made a great show a Byzantine


medical text and his menageries, whilst gathering a court of scholars,


philosophers and artists.? Rudolph II?s


Prague garden is also worthy of note, as is his extensive patronage.? Appearing to be sage and wise by being


?scientific? through support of the arts was a big incentive for the patrons of


the day, quite aside from the usual reasons for patronage, such as Richard II?s


obvious motives for the Wilton Diptych.?


Just as the form of Masaccio?s painting is brutally


real, Donatello?s figure of St. George is real, although is a lighter, fresher


way.? By contrast, Donatello shows the


capability to produce the viciously realistic with his relief of ?Herod?s


Feast? at Siena Cathedral.? Whilst


the Middle Ages produced dainty and delicate artwork that showed order and


sterilised such gruesome passages, Donatello?s realism is almost sadistic by


comparison.? Showing the executioner


kneeling before a horrified Herod, his evil wife is shown rationalising the horror


of what was going on, whilst Salome is shown shocked and pausing in her dance.


Meanwhile, the other diners recoil in horror at the sight of St. John the


Baptist?s head. This idea of reflecting the real world was an


innovation localised to a small group of painters in certain areas, and this in


itself was a major development.?


Although minor local variations on themes existed, Europe existed at


this time as an integral continent.?


Art, architecture, learning and politics were universals, common to the


continent.? The emergence of burghers


and merchants willing to protect their local interests changed this before our


period opens, and guilds began to regulate cities and towns for the benefits of


their members, thus excluding ?foreign? employees from taking work from guild


members.? This encouraged the ending of


the ?Internatio

nal Style? and the formation of regional ?schools?.? The guilds forced young boys whose parents


saw art as their calling to train imitating the art of the local masters, so


that the young artist would eventually be able to paint on the master?s


behalf.? This formed and


institutionalised very distinct and separate regional styles.? Brunelleschi?s successors followed in his


footsteps, with Alberti developing the Brunelleschian style.? Ghiberti?s bronze of the Baptism in the Jordan


is similarly a study on Donatello?s style.?


Using Donatello?s ?Dance of Salome? as a guide on the piece?s character


and aesthetics and a twelfth century brass at Liege for content, tone and the


required depth. The printing of pictures preceded the printing of


books by some decades and the most important innovation of the era was to


impact on art also.? The advent of the


woodcut as a cheap means of printing meant that cheap pamphlets were easily


producible.? However, copper prints were


more important for art.? Copper prints


could show variegation of shading by different depths of cut and the plates


lasted much longer.? Skilful use of the


burin allowed the etcher to etch in the style of Botticelli and Mategna ? two


popularly copied artists in Italy ? and thus allowed ideas to spread far and


wide about new artistic trends. The sixteenth


century brought Italy its most celebrated artistic period as the position of


the artist had begun to change.? As


cities competed for artists to beautify their buildings, so the power of the


artists grew.? During the Quatrocento


Renaissance, it is important to remember that artists were not the isolated


visionaries as romanticised about today, but were businessmen in possession of


demanding clients.? Painters did not


paint a picture in the hope of acquiring a buyer, except in extremely lean


periods, when less demanded painters might produce a run of icons of the


Madonna or of some similarly saleable subject.?


In the fifteenth century, pictures were made to order by the client and


no painting was the artist?s genius acting in isolation: on the contrary,


?painting was still too important to be left to the painters.[2]? Art became to


be viewed not as a craft, but as a skilled profession.? Physicians, such as Vesalius, began to


dissect bodies themselves in this period, instead of observing


dissections.? This was a fusion of


liberal artist into craftsman, and indicative of an ongoing general trend that


took the craft of painting into the bounds, despite Aristotle?s snobbery into


the realms of liberal art. The resulting liberation of the artist and the


unleashing of creativity upon the world was vital for the obvious freedom of


the period?s art and served to increase the culthood that Masters had attracted


since Giotto, the first Master. ?Indeed,


Giotto?s reputation was potent two hundred years on, and Masaccio still easily


impressed the world. ??????????? For all the praise of


Burckhardt, Da Vinci makes surprisingly few innovations.? His magnificent ?Last Supper? is


important in that it is the culmination of the solution to the new problem of


three-dimensional composition.? Whilst


Pollaiuolo?s ?Martyrdom of St Sebastian? is obviously forced and


unnatural in its setting, Leonardo?s piece is natural yet compelling, chaotic


in theme yet neat in order. ?He uses


optical illusions in the ?Mona Lisa? to compel the viewer so that sfomato


hides the true expression of the model, and so that the mismatching


background means that the angle of observation of the picture alters one?s


perception of it. These were more gimmicks than developments, but worth noting


for they show the degree of sophistication of art as a science.? Viewing art as a science, Michelangelo?s


great contribution to art was his mastery of anatomy.? In the same way that Turner would become known for his clouds,


Michelangelo became known as a Master to rival his contemporary, Leonardo, by


the age of thirty for his ability to depict the human form. ??????????? Younger still, Raphael


was in Florence at a similar time, but made a vital innovation.? Whereas the Quattrocento artists,


Michelangelo and Leonardo were obsessed with the depiction of nature through


their art, Raphael was happier to use an imaginary ideal for his models.? Galatea is recognised for her beauty, as she


symbolises the classical world as it should have been, and was recognised as a


representation of pure beauty, but famously, she had no model. ??????????? Florence, it must be


remembered, was not the sole cradle of art in Europe ? it was not even the sole


cradle of reform in Italy.? The great


reformers of Florence were less taken by colour than form, whereas in the hazy,


ambient lagoon light of Venice, colour was more important and developments


occurred paralleling the achievements of Florence. Venice?s preoccupation with


colour is a result of the heritage of the Venetian school?s direct descendance


from the medieval tradition, where ?real? colour was almost irrelevant ? the


gold and ultramarine miniatures of the era never claimed any air of


realism.? Giorgione?s ?The Tempest? is


an excellent example of the local school?s importance, as he forgets classical


lessons about the importance of composition, the importance of careful


representation and merely uses the colours of the painting to bind it


together.? Titian, who rose to the same


heights in his own time as Michelangelo (possibly because of his exceptional


longevity) masterminded the deliberate drawing of attention from location to


location by using light and darkness and using straight converging lines. ??????????? The


Italian learning spread across the continent, fusing with native Gothic styles


as a result of the plundering and the occupations of the Italian Wars, but


Italy continued to drive forwards.? In


the 1520s, the plethora of talent led many to claim that perfection had been


attained, and so, Mannerism developed.?


The inability to outdo their forebears in skill led many to try to outdo


them in their invention and originality of form.? Michelangelo?s own disregard for norms, especially in


architecture, had briefed the European public for such an occurrence and taught


the European public to admire an artist?s originality.? The result was the growth of the appeal of


virtuosos such as Cellini and this led to bizarre and extravagant


semi-reactionary works.? Contravening


the most basic of the classical texts on paintings, the Mannerists tried to


drive themselves from what they saw as a rut. ??????????? The


Mannerist Jacob Robusti (Tintoretto) felt that the beauty of Titian?s work was


not compelling enough for story telling.?


Using fragmented light instead of Titianesque swathes of colour and


using imbalanced arrangements of figures, Tintoretto portrayed the legend of


St. George and the discovery of St. Mark?s remains with great power and


excitement.? A further extension of this


school was El Greco?s work.? Raised in


Crete, El Greco was used to the Byzantine style that was devoid of natural


appearance or realism.? Encouraged by


Tintoretto?s work, El Greco?s art disregarded natural form and colours


producing stirring visions, notably in his ?Opening of the Fifth Seal?, a


very shocking piece.? His


residence in Spain where there was a religious fervour suited to his style is a


happy coincidence for the art world.. ??????????? The


idolatry of Spain that sustained El Greco and kept his reputation and finances


afloat was lacking at this time in much of northern Europe.? Protestantism prevented the production of


religious images.? Portrait painting and


illustration alone sustained the northern painters.? Hals? use of ?undignified? poses, unlike Holbein?s contrived


dignity, was designed to convey a characteristic mood, but like Holbein, it


followed strict rules of balance. ??????????? The area


of most interest to art historians in the Netherlands is the fate of the old


altarpiece painters, many of whom began to paint landscapes. By becoming genre


painters, the Dutch artists were able to continue to thrive.? This era saw the birth of the landscape – a


result of a financial necessity to find new subject matter.? The landscape was a pure show of artistic


talent; something that could not have happened prior to the cult of the artist. ??????????? The


seventeenth century saw the greatest advances since Michelangelo?s death.? The Roman Baroque style, with its


abandonment of some of the simplicity of classical architecture whilst


retaining its motifs, rose at this time.?


A reaction to the polarisation of wealth, extravagance unseen since the


Gothic era was possible.? The


triumphalism of the Counter-Reformation, the renewed power of the Papacy and


the rise of absolutism as a doctrine all led firstly the church, and then


royalty, to turn to the Baroque as a show of might.? Breaking new rules by sheer expense and extravagance, this was a


Roman extension of Mannerist independent thinking.? Bernini?s David is not Michelangelo?s David. Carracci, under Rafaelite


influences, moved to an era of classically influenced anatomy, sentimentality,


simple and harmonious painting.?


Meanwhile, Caravaggio moved to unravel the truth at the cost of


beauty.? To him, beauty was not of any


importance, and the world as it existed was all that mattered.? His irreverent ?Doubting Thomas? was


criticised for its depiction of the apostles as common labourers.? The contrast between Carravaggio?s


Aristotlean brutal realism (disparagingly called ?naturalism?) and Carracci?s


Platonic world of ideals we see reflected elsewhere. Rubens? idyllic landscapes


contrast with Velazquez?s early works.??????????? The


Renaissance changes were multifaceted.?


The artist was brought onto a skewed plain in relation to his art, and


this era?s love of ?Masters? gives us our modern preoccupation with the works


of famous artists.? The printing press


allowed dissemination of copies of Botticellis or other popular works, so


popularising art and allowing widespread art appreciation.? Despite this, the era saw the ?schools? come


to the fore, as each supported its champion against one another.? Stylistically, perspective was the single


most important innovation, as Giotto?s understanding of foreshortening had


already allowed some realism to exist in art, paradoxiscally as a result of his


study of the unnatural Byzantine school.?


The movement for the real world as art grew until Raphael?s ability to


conjure natural beauty showed an alternative.?


The movement from the realism of Michelangelo to the blurred impressions


of Velazquez and Rembrandt indicate a middle ground.? Finally surpassing the Ancients, the Renaissance was truly a


rebirth for Italian art, as masters like Donatello, irritated by the staleness


of the vogues of their fields, spearheaded reform, and genii such as Masaccio,


Michelangelo and Leonardo applied the lessons of science to art. [1] P. 144, ?The


Story of Art? ? E.H. Gombrich [2] P. 3 ?


Michael Baxendall ? Painting and Experience in Fifteenth Century Italy


389

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