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Chapter 14, Section 1 The Italian Renaissance

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Title: Chapter 14, Section 1 The Italian Renaissance


1
Chapter 14, Section 1The Italian Renaissance
Vitruvian man, Leonardo da Vinci, ca. 1492
2
This century, wrote philosopher Marsilio
Ficino, like a golden age has restored to light
the liberal arts, which were almost extinct
grammar, poetry, rhetoric, painting, sculpture,
architecture, music. What a glorious time to be
alive, he thought. As Ficino recognized, a
new age had dawned in Western Europe. Europeans
called it the Renaissance, meaning rebirth. It
began in the 1300s and reached its peak around
1500.
3
I. The Italian Renaissance
  • Began with a new interest in the cultures of
    ancient Rome and Greece

4
I. The Italian Renaissance
  • It was a time of reawakening after the disorder
    and disunity of the Medieval World

5
I. The Italian Renaissance
  • Began in Italy - cities became centers of trade
    and manufacturing

6
I. The Italian Renaissance
  • Florence came to symbolize energy and brilliance
    of Italian Renaissance

7
I. The Italian Renaissance
  • A wealthy merchant class promoted cultural rebirth

8
I. The Italian Renaissance
  • Emphasis was on education and individual
    achievement

9
I. The Italian Renaissance
  • Wealthy patrons played a major role by sponsoring
    artists

10
I. The Italian Renaissance
  • The Medici Family of Florence were among the
    richest bankers and merchants in Europe

Bottecilli's "The Adoration of the Magi" (1476)
with the Medici family and friends
11
I. The Italian Renaissance
  • Lorenzo Medici was a patron and supported poets,
    philosophers, and artists

12
II. What was the Renaissance?
  • A time of creativity and change
  • political
  • social
  • economic
  • cultural

13
II. What was the Renaissance?
  • A change in the way people viewed themselves and
    their world

Auguste Rodin - The Thinker
14
II. What was the Renaissance?
  • Renaissance thinkers explored the human
    experience in the here and now

15
II. What was the Renaissance?
  • It also supported a spirit of adventure

16
III. Humanism
  • Focused on worldly subjects rather than only
    religious issues

17
III. Humanism
  • Based on study of classical culture grammar,
    rhetoric, poetry, and history

18
III. Humanism
  • Believed education should stimulate the
    individuals creative powers

19
IV. The Arts
  • Renaissance art reflected humanist concerns

The Birth Of Venus by Sandro Botticelli (1485)
20
IV. The Arts
  • Artists developed techniques, such as
    perspective, for painting in a realistic way

21
IV. The Arts
  • Architects adopted columns, arches, and domes
    from the Greeks and Romans

Roman Aqueducts
The Pantheon in Rome
22
IV. The Arts
  • Three of the most celebrated artists were
    Leonardo da Vinci

Mona Lisa
Self-portrait
Sketch of a man
23
  • Michelangelo

The Pieta
David
The Creation of Adam
24
  • Raphael

Raphaels School of Athens was famous for
depicting figures of the Classical past with the
features of his Renaissance contemporaries
The Crucifixion
25
IV. The Arts
  • Renaissance writers included Castiglione and
    Machiavelli

Niccolò Machiavelli
Castiglione
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