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Art History

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Art History

Art History

| Web Museum | Web Gallery of Art | The Artchive |

I. Religious and Mythological

Up until the Renaissance, most art had to do with religion. Architecture, sculpture, music and painting all centered around the scenes from the Bible, the lives of the saints, and portraits of Madonna and the Christ Child. But this changed as the Renaissance progressed. Greek and Roman gods reappeared everywhere. Sculptures imitated those of ancient Greece. ROMEO AND JULIET and most of Shakespeare's work are full of references to the ancient gods and their myths. A good example of this transition might be to view a strong Biblical theme from the early 1400's and then take a look at one artist's version of mythological subjects painted about 75 years later.

A. Religious: Lorenzo Ghiberti was a sculptor whose greatest work was the bronze doors he designed and completed for the Baptistry at Florence in the first half of the 15th Century.

• Check the web sites on the bronze sculptures of Ghiberti and the Eastern Door of the Baptistry in Florence for the following questions:

1. Describe the panel of the Sacrifice of Isaac. What

Bible scene is Ghiberti portraying?

2. Describe the detail in the Creation of Adam, a panel on

the Eastern door of the Baptistry. How does it differ

from Michelangelo's depiction of the ceiling of the

Sistine Chapel?

3. Choose one other famous Biblical scene and describe

Ghiberti's interpretation of it.

B. Mythological: Now to the mythological - Botticelli painted religious scenes as well, but two of his most famous works deal with famous myths, stories which the ancient Greeks told to explain nature and the world around them. Using his Allegory of Spring or Primavera, answer the following:

1. Name a major god and a major goddess in the painting.

2. What other minor gods or goddesses appear in the

painting?

3. This painting is considered an allegory as its title

suggests. What story might it be explaining?

4. Viewing Botticelli's Birth of Venus and reading the

text, answer the following:

a. Describe the scene, explaining the myth behind it.

b. Why do you think it was so important to have a

Venus of such grace and beauty?

c. According to the text, what imperfections are there

in Botticelli's model of Venus.

II. The Davids

Compare Donatello's and Michelangelo's Davids. How are they different?

After consulting these web sites, answer the questions that follow.

• Information on Michelangelo's David

• Donatello: Biographical information

A. Why is Donatello's David so "innovative" for its time?

B. Compare the two David's

1. height

2. composition (What is each made of?)

3. stance (What attitude does each statue convey to the

viewer?)

C. Where are the two statues today?

III. High Renaissance

During the High Renaissance three brilliant artists emerged: Leonardo DaVinci, Michelangelo Buonarroti, and Raphael (Raffaelo Sanzio).

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