La pintura La balsa de la Medusa de Géricault representa la tragedia de los náufragos de una fragata francesa en 1816. El cuadro muestra a los sobrevivientes en una balsa luchando entre la vida y la muerte, marcando el inicio del Romanticismo pictórico francés. La obra se basa en un hecho histórico real y critica la glorificación de la historia mostrada anteriormente, enfocándose en la desesperación y la muerte en lugar del heroísmo.
Venice became a prosperous trading center in the 16th century, developing a distinctive style of oil painting characterized by vibrant color and loose brushwork. Artists like Giovanni Bellini, Giorgione, and Titian perfected new techniques like oil painting on canvas and created beautifully realistic works that captured the light and atmosphere of Venice. These masters established Venice as a major center of Renaissance art alongside Florence and Rome.
El documento describe la escultura barroca en Italia y España. En Italia, destaca la obra de Bernini, conocido por obras como El rapto de Proserpina y Éxtasis de Santa Teresa que expresan sentimientos mediante movimiento y escorzos. En España, la escultura barroca se centró en la temática religiosa, utilizando madera policromada. Destacan las escuelas de Castilla con Gregorio Fernández, Andalucía con Juan Martínez Montañés y Alonso Cano, y Murcia con Salzillo.
Jan van Eyck was one of the greatest revolutionaries in art. He radically changed the way in which men look at the natural world. His artistic achievements were well-known in Renaissance Italy. Vasari, who wrote about Van Eyck a hundred years later, wrongly attributed the discovery of oil painting to him. Only a few years after his death in 1441, Jan van Eyck was being hailed on both sides of the Alps as one of the greatest painter of the age.
Despite Van Eyck’s great fame, little is known of his life except for his last years. For the last 16 years of his life, he worked at the court of Philip the Good, The Duke of Burgundy. The Duke made use of his skills as both painter and diplomat, sending him on numerous secret missions.
The works of Jan van Eyck are celebrated for their visual splendor and precision of detail. Their brilliant colours and magnificent definition are due to Jan’s refinement of the oil-painting technique.
The document summarizes the painting "Las Meninas" by Diego Velázquez from 1656. It describes the central figure of the infant Margarita surrounded by two bridesmaids, Agustina Sarmiento and Isabel de Velasco. To the right are characters María Bárbola and Nicolás Pertusato, and to the left is the painter himself, Diego Velázquez. In the background there are two speaking characters and a reflection in the mirror of King Felipe IV and Queen Mariana of Austria can be seen.
Elaborada a partir de la presentación de Tomás Pérez Molina (www.slideshare.net/tomperez).
Las fuentes de los recursos utilizados figuran en la última diapositiva.
La pintura La balsa de la Medusa de Géricault representa la tragedia de los náufragos de una fragata francesa en 1816. El cuadro muestra a los sobrevivientes en una balsa luchando entre la vida y la muerte, marcando el inicio del Romanticismo pictórico francés. La obra se basa en un hecho histórico real y critica la glorificación de la historia mostrada anteriormente, enfocándose en la desesperación y la muerte en lugar del heroísmo.
Venice became a prosperous trading center in the 16th century, developing a distinctive style of oil painting characterized by vibrant color and loose brushwork. Artists like Giovanni Bellini, Giorgione, and Titian perfected new techniques like oil painting on canvas and created beautifully realistic works that captured the light and atmosphere of Venice. These masters established Venice as a major center of Renaissance art alongside Florence and Rome.
El documento describe la escultura barroca en Italia y España. En Italia, destaca la obra de Bernini, conocido por obras como El rapto de Proserpina y Éxtasis de Santa Teresa que expresan sentimientos mediante movimiento y escorzos. En España, la escultura barroca se centró en la temática religiosa, utilizando madera policromada. Destacan las escuelas de Castilla con Gregorio Fernández, Andalucía con Juan Martínez Montañés y Alonso Cano, y Murcia con Salzillo.
Jan van Eyck was one of the greatest revolutionaries in art. He radically changed the way in which men look at the natural world. His artistic achievements were well-known in Renaissance Italy. Vasari, who wrote about Van Eyck a hundred years later, wrongly attributed the discovery of oil painting to him. Only a few years after his death in 1441, Jan van Eyck was being hailed on both sides of the Alps as one of the greatest painter of the age.
Despite Van Eyck’s great fame, little is known of his life except for his last years. For the last 16 years of his life, he worked at the court of Philip the Good, The Duke of Burgundy. The Duke made use of his skills as both painter and diplomat, sending him on numerous secret missions.
The works of Jan van Eyck are celebrated for their visual splendor and precision of detail. Their brilliant colours and magnificent definition are due to Jan’s refinement of the oil-painting technique.
The document summarizes the painting "Las Meninas" by Diego Velázquez from 1656. It describes the central figure of the infant Margarita surrounded by two bridesmaids, Agustina Sarmiento and Isabel de Velasco. To the right are characters María Bárbola and Nicolás Pertusato, and to the left is the painter himself, Diego Velázquez. In the background there are two speaking characters and a reflection in the mirror of King Felipe IV and Queen Mariana of Austria can be seen.
Elaborada a partir de la presentación de Tomás Pérez Molina (www.slideshare.net/tomperez).
Las fuentes de los recursos utilizados figuran en la última diapositiva.
1) Students from a school in Thessaloniki, Greece painted a mural depicting a detail from Raphael's "School of Athens".
2) Raphael was an Italian painter from the High Renaissance period renowned for his skilled compositions and portrayal of human grandeur.
3) His most famous work, "The School of Athens", depicts a gathering of philosophers set in a Roman building and combines Renaissance architecture with figures of important historical thinkers.
The Art of Love: An Exhibition of Jean-Honore Fragonard’s Worksmchin2
The document discusses Jean-Honore Fragonard's works focusing on themes of love and romance from the late 18th century. It analyzes several of Fragonard's paintings including Blind Man's Bluff, The Swing, The Stolen Kiss, and The Progress of Love series. The paintings depict various aspects of love from playful courtship to erotic intimacy through Fragonard's signature Rococo style with pastel colors and elaborate detail. The document concludes Fragonard was a master of portraying love during the Rococo period through his artistic skill and sensitivity to light, color and symbolism.
En 3 oraciones:
Bernini creó el grupo escultórico del Éxtasis de Santa Teresa para la Capilla Cornaro en Roma entre 1647-1651. La escultura muestra el momento místico descrito por Santa Teresa en su autobiografía, donde un ángel le introduce un dardo de oro en el corazón. Bernini logra plasmar de forma dinámica y teatral la unión mística entre el alma y Dios mediante la expresividad de los personajes y la composición en diagonal que crea tensión dramática. La obra sintetiza
Rembrandt van Rijn was one of the greatest Dutch masters of the Baroque period. He worked in a wide range of subjects including portraits, history paintings, and biblical scenes. Rembrandt had a deeply personal interpretation of religious subjects, seeking to portray biblical figures as real people. He was renowned for his use of chiaroscuro and his dramatic manipulation of light and shadow to convey emotion and psychology. Later in life, Rembrandt's style became looser and more expressive as he sought to capture fleeting moments. His self-portraits provide intimate insights into the artist and how his mood changed over his lifetime. Jan Vermeer was another great Dutch painter who specialized in tranquil domestic interior scenes lit by even
El documento describe varios importantes edificios religiosos y civiles en Salamanca, incluyendo el Convento de las Dueñas, el Convento de Santa Clara, el Palacio de Monterrey, la Iglesia de la Purísima Convento de las Agustinas, el Palacio de la Salina y el Museo Casa Lis de Arte Nouveau y Déco. Proporciona detalles históricos sobre la fundación y características arquitectónicas de cada uno.
Leonardo's painting - Who is Mona Lisa ver 2.0Jerry Daperro
Leonardo was born in or near the town of Vinci, about half way between Florence and Pisa, on 15 April 1452. He was the illegitimate son of a rising Florentine legal official Ser Piero da Vinci. He was good at drawing and was enrolled with the leading Florentine artist of Verrocchio in 1469, at the age of 17. Leonardo was probably the greatest artists of the Renaissance. His studies were strictly based in the scientific methods, on vigorous analysis and on objective reasoning. But it was his inquisitive mind that drove the man forever forward to understand our place in nature. According to art historian Helen Gardner, the scope and depth of his interests were without precedent in recorded history. Apart from portraits, religious themes and historical paintings, Leonardo’s greatest legacies were his notebooks and drawings. He influenced many of his contemporary artists, including Michelangelo Raphael, Giorgione and Bramante. Yet he always had a deep distrust of human society. “Alone you are all yourself.”
Baroque art originated in Rome in the late 16th century as a style that glorified Catholicism and absolute monarchs in response to the Protestant Reformation. Baroque art is characterized by grandeur, drama, movement, and vibrant colors in large-scale works. Key artists included Bernini, whose sculptures exemplified drama and movement, and Rubens, whose paintings depicted religious scenes with theatrical flourishes. Caravaggio introduced greater realism through life-like figures and tenebrism techniques. In Protestant Holland, Baroque art focused on realistic genre paintings, portraits, landscapes and still lifes for the bourgeois class rather than public religious works.
This PowerPoint presentation was created to give European History/Western Civilization students an introduction to Renaissance art and its key characteristics - especially its projection of humanist and classical themes.
For more instructional materials, visit www.tomrichey.net!
Elaborada a partir de la presentación de Tomás Pérez Molina (www.slideshare.net/tomperez).
Las fuentes de los recursos utilizados figuran en la última diapositiva.
1) Students from a school in Thessaloniki, Greece painted a mural depicting a detail from Raphael's "School of Athens".
2) Raphael was an Italian painter from the High Renaissance period renowned for his skilled compositions and portrayal of human grandeur.
3) His most famous work, "The School of Athens", depicts a gathering of philosophers set in a Roman building and combines Renaissance architecture with figures of important historical thinkers.
The Art of Love: An Exhibition of Jean-Honore Fragonard’s Worksmchin2
The document discusses Jean-Honore Fragonard's works focusing on themes of love and romance from the late 18th century. It analyzes several of Fragonard's paintings including Blind Man's Bluff, The Swing, The Stolen Kiss, and The Progress of Love series. The paintings depict various aspects of love from playful courtship to erotic intimacy through Fragonard's signature Rococo style with pastel colors and elaborate detail. The document concludes Fragonard was a master of portraying love during the Rococo period through his artistic skill and sensitivity to light, color and symbolism.
En 3 oraciones:
Bernini creó el grupo escultórico del Éxtasis de Santa Teresa para la Capilla Cornaro en Roma entre 1647-1651. La escultura muestra el momento místico descrito por Santa Teresa en su autobiografía, donde un ángel le introduce un dardo de oro en el corazón. Bernini logra plasmar de forma dinámica y teatral la unión mística entre el alma y Dios mediante la expresividad de los personajes y la composición en diagonal que crea tensión dramática. La obra sintetiza
Rembrandt van Rijn was one of the greatest Dutch masters of the Baroque period. He worked in a wide range of subjects including portraits, history paintings, and biblical scenes. Rembrandt had a deeply personal interpretation of religious subjects, seeking to portray biblical figures as real people. He was renowned for his use of chiaroscuro and his dramatic manipulation of light and shadow to convey emotion and psychology. Later in life, Rembrandt's style became looser and more expressive as he sought to capture fleeting moments. His self-portraits provide intimate insights into the artist and how his mood changed over his lifetime. Jan Vermeer was another great Dutch painter who specialized in tranquil domestic interior scenes lit by even
El documento describe varios importantes edificios religiosos y civiles en Salamanca, incluyendo el Convento de las Dueñas, el Convento de Santa Clara, el Palacio de Monterrey, la Iglesia de la Purísima Convento de las Agustinas, el Palacio de la Salina y el Museo Casa Lis de Arte Nouveau y Déco. Proporciona detalles históricos sobre la fundación y características arquitectónicas de cada uno.
Leonardo's painting - Who is Mona Lisa ver 2.0Jerry Daperro
Leonardo was born in or near the town of Vinci, about half way between Florence and Pisa, on 15 April 1452. He was the illegitimate son of a rising Florentine legal official Ser Piero da Vinci. He was good at drawing and was enrolled with the leading Florentine artist of Verrocchio in 1469, at the age of 17. Leonardo was probably the greatest artists of the Renaissance. His studies were strictly based in the scientific methods, on vigorous analysis and on objective reasoning. But it was his inquisitive mind that drove the man forever forward to understand our place in nature. According to art historian Helen Gardner, the scope and depth of his interests were without precedent in recorded history. Apart from portraits, religious themes and historical paintings, Leonardo’s greatest legacies were his notebooks and drawings. He influenced many of his contemporary artists, including Michelangelo Raphael, Giorgione and Bramante. Yet he always had a deep distrust of human society. “Alone you are all yourself.”
Baroque art originated in Rome in the late 16th century as a style that glorified Catholicism and absolute monarchs in response to the Protestant Reformation. Baroque art is characterized by grandeur, drama, movement, and vibrant colors in large-scale works. Key artists included Bernini, whose sculptures exemplified drama and movement, and Rubens, whose paintings depicted religious scenes with theatrical flourishes. Caravaggio introduced greater realism through life-like figures and tenebrism techniques. In Protestant Holland, Baroque art focused on realistic genre paintings, portraits, landscapes and still lifes for the bourgeois class rather than public religious works.
This PowerPoint presentation was created to give European History/Western Civilization students an introduction to Renaissance art and its key characteristics - especially its projection of humanist and classical themes.
For more instructional materials, visit www.tomrichey.net!
Elaborada a partir de la presentación de Tomás Pérez Molina (www.slideshare.net/tomperez).
Las fuentes de los recursos utilizados figuran en la última diapositiva.