Title: Baroque Art in Europe
1Baroque Art in Europe
2Europe in the 17th Century
3Baroque The Ornate Age
- Baroque Art (1600-1750) succeeded in marrying the
advance techniques and grand scale of the
Renaissance to the emotion, intensity and drama
of Mannerism. - Baroque art was the most ornate and sumptuous in
the history of art. - While the term Baroque is often used negatively
to mean over done and ostentatious, the 17th
century not only produced such artistic geniuses
as Rembrandt and Velasquez, but expanded the role
of art into everyday life - Artists now called Baroque came from all over
Europe to Rome to study the masterpieces of
Classical antiquity and the High Renaissance then
returned home to interpret what they had learned
in their own unique way.
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5Baroque The Style
- Baroque styles varied widely, ranging from
Italian realism to French flamboyance. - However, the common element throughout Baroque
art was the sensitivity to and the absolute
mastery of Light in order to achieve maximum
impact. - The Baroque era began in Rome around 1600 with
Catholic popes financing magnificent cathedrals
to display the triumph of their faith over the
Counter Reformation. - From their it traveled to France where absolute
monarchs ruled by divine right and spent amount
comparable to the pharaohs to glorify themselves. - In Catholic countries, like Flanders, religious
art flourished, while in the Protestant lands of
northern Europe, religious imagery was forbidden - As a result art tended to be still life,
portraits, landscapes and scenes from everyday
life.
6- Louis XIV
- Rigaud
- 1701
- Oil on canvas
- C. 9X7
- Louvre
7The Baroque in ItalyPainting and Architecture
- Caravaggio
- Gentileschi
- Bernini
- Boromini
8Baroque Art in Italy
- Artists in Rome pioneered the Baroque style
before it spread to the rest of Europe. - Art academies had been established in Rome to
train artists in the various techniques
developed during the Renaissance. - Artists could expertly represent the human body
from any angle, portray the most complex
perspective and realistically reproduce almost
anything. - Italian Baroque art differs from Renaissance art
with its emphasis on emotion rather than
rationality, on dynamic rather than static
compositions. - The most striking difference between Italian
Baroque and Renaissance painting was the use of
light to dramatize a composition.
9Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio
10Caravaggio 1571-1610
- He was the first great representative of the
Baroque style. - Within his lifetime, Caravaggio was considered
enigmatic, fascinating, a rebel, and dangerous. - He burst upon the Rome art scene in 1600, and
thereafter never lacked for commissions or
patrons, yet handled his success atrociously.
11- An early published notice on him, dating from
1604 and describing his lifestyle some three
years previously, tells how - "after a fortnight's work he will swagger about
for a month or two with a sword at his side and a
servant following him, from one ball-court to the
next, ever ready to engage in a fight or an
argument, so that it is most awkward to get along
with him. - In 1606 he killed a young man in a brawl and fled
from Rome with a price on his head. - In Malta in 1608 he was involved in another
brawl, and yet another in Naples in 1609,
possibly a deliberate attempt on his life by
unidentified enemies. - By the next year, after a career of little more
than a decade, he was dead.
12- Huge new churches and palaces were being built in
Rome in the decades of the late 16th and early
17th centuries, and paintings were needed to fill
them. - The Counter-Reformation Church searched for
authentic religious art with which to counter the
threat of Protestantism, and for this task the
artificial conventions of Mannerism, which had
ruled art for almost a century, no longer seemed
adequate. - Caravaggio's novelty was a radical naturalism
which combined close physical observation with a
dramatic, even theatrical, approach to
chiaroscuro, the use of light and shadow. In
Caravaggio's hands this new style was the vehicle
for authentic and moving spirituality. - Famous and extremely influential while he lived,
Caravaggio was almost entirely forgotten in the
centuries after his death, and it was only in the
20th century that his importance to the
development of Western art was rediscovered.
Chalk portrait of Caravaggio by Ottavio Leoni,
13- Boy with a Basket of Fruit
- c. 1593
- Oil on canvas
- 70 x 67cm
- Galleria Borghese Rome
14- The Fortune Teller, 1596-97, Oil on canvas
- 99 x 131cm, Louvre, Paris
15- The Cardsharps, c. 1594, Oil on canvas
- 94 131 cm, Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth
16- Judith Beheading Holofernes, c. 1598, Oil on
canvas - 58 x 78 inches, Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica,
Rome
17- Narcissus
- 1598-99
- Oil on canvas
- 110 x 92 cm
- Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica, Rome
18- The Calling of Saint Matthew, 1599-1600, Oil on
canvas - C. 10 x 11 feet, Contarelli Chapel, San Luigi dei
Francesi, Rome
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21- The Martyrdom of St Matthew
- 1599-1600
- Oil on canvas
- 323 x 343 cm
- Contarelli Chapel
- San Luigi dei Francesi Rome
22- St. John the Baptist (Youth with Ram)
- c. 1600
- Oil on canvas
- 129 x 94 cm
- Musei Capitolini, Rome
23- David
- 1600
- Oil on canvas,
- 110 x 91 cm
24- The Incredulity of Saint Thomas, 1601-02, Oil on
canvas - 107 x 146 cm, Sanssouci, Potsdam
25- Supper at Emmaus, 1601-02, Oil on canvas
- 139 x 195 cm, National Gallery, London
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27- Conversion of St Paul
- 1601
- The painting records the moment when Saul of
Tarsus, on his way to Damascus to annihilate the
Christian community there, is struck blind by a
brilliant light and hears the voice of Christ
saying, "Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou
me?...And they that were with me saw indeed the
light, and were afraid, but they heard not the
voice..." (Acts 226-11).
28- The Crucifixion of Saint Peter
- 1600
- Oil on canvas
- 230 x 175 cm
- Cerasi Chapel
- Santa Maria del Popolo
- Rome
- This painting was commissioned at the same time
as the Conversion of St. Paul, by Cardinal Cerasi.
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30- Entombment
- 1603-04
- Oil on canvas
- c. 10x7 feet
- Vatican Museum
- One of many paintings confiscated from Roman
churches and taken to Paris during Napoleon's
occupation of Italy in 1798. It was one of the
few paintings returned to Italy in 1815.
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32- Madonna di Loreto
- 1603-05
- Oil on canvas
- 260 x 150 cm
- S. Agostino, Rome
- Caravaggio often used everyday people as models
for his paintings.
33- Death of the Virgin
- 1606
- Oil on canvas
- 369 245 cm
- Louvre, Paris
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35- Flagellation
- c. 1607
- Oil on canvas
- 390 x 260 cm
- Museo Nazionale di Capodimonte
- Naples
36- Beheading of Saint John the Baptist
- 1608, Oil on canvas, 361 x 520 cm, Saint John
Museum, La Valletta
37- The Raising of Lazarus
- 1608-09
- Oil on canvas
- 380 x 275 cm
- Museo Nazionale, Messina
- Some critics claimed that Caravaggio used an
actual corpse as a model for the figure of
Lazarus.
38- Burial of St Lucy
- 1608
- Oil on canvas
- 408 x 300cm
- Bellamo Museum, Syracuse
39- Salome with the Head of the Baptist
- c. 1609, Oil on canvas, 116 x 140 cm, Palazzo
Real, Madrid
40- David
- 1609-10
- Oil on canvas
- 125 x 101 cm
- Galleria Borghese
- Rome
41 42- Caravaggios fame scarcely survived his death.
- His innovations inspired the Baroque, but the
Baroque took the drama of his chiaroscuro without
the psychological realism. - He directly influenced the style of his companion
Orazio Gentileschi, and his daughter Artemisia
Gentileschi, and, at a distance, the Frenchmen
Georges de La Tour and Simon Vouet, and the
Spaniard Giuseppe Ribera. - Yet within a few decades his works were being
ascribed to less scandalous artists, or simply
overlooked. - Caravaggio never established a workshop and thus
had no school to spread his techniques. - Nor did he ever set out his underlying
philosophical approach to art, the psychological
realism which can only be deduced from his
surviving work. - Thus his reputation was doubly vulnerable to the
critical demolition-jobs done by two of his
earliest biographers, one, a rival painter with a
personal vendetta, and the other an influential
17th century critic, who had not known him but
was under the influence of the French artist,
Poussin, who had not known him either but hated
his work. - In the 1920s art critic Roberto Longhi brought
Caravaggio's name once more to public attention,
asserting that, Ribera, Vermeer, La Tour and
Rembrandt could never have existed without him.
And the art of Delacroix, Courbet and Manet would
have been utterly different. - The influential critic Bernard Berenson agreed
With the exception of Michaelangelo, no other
Italian painter exercised so great an influence.
43The Gentlesechi Family
- Orazio Gentileschi
- and his daughter Artemisia Gentileschi,
44Orazio Gentileschi
-
- 1563 - 1639
- Italian Baroque painter
- one of more important painters influenced by
Caravaggio - He was the father of the painter Artemisia
Gentileschi. - Lutenist
- c 1626.
- Oil on canvas
45 Artemisia Gentileschi
- Artemisia Gentileschi (1593 -1652), was one of
the first women artists to achieve recognition in
the male-dominated world of post-Renaissance art.
- In an era when female artists were limited to
portrait painting, she was the first woman to
paint major historical and religious scenes. - Born in Rome in 1593, she received her early
training from her father, but after art academies
rejected her, she continued study under a friend
of her father, Agostino Tassi. - In 1612, her father brought suit against Tassi
for raping Artemisia. - There followed a highly publicized seven-month
trial. - The trauma of the rape and trial had an enormous
impact on Artemisia's painting. - Her graphic depictions were cathartic and
symbolic attempts to deal with the physical and
psychic pain. - The heroines of her art, especially Judith, are
powerful women exacting revenge on such male
evildoers as the Assyrian general Holofernes. - Her style was heavily influenced by dramatic
realism and the marked chiaroscuro of Caravaggio.
46- Susanna and the Elders (1610) was one of the
first works of the young 17-year-old Artemisia. - The painting depicts the biblical story of
Susanna, a virtuous young wife sexually harassed
by the elders of her community. - Rather than showing Susanna as coyly or
flirtatious (as many male artists had painted the
scene), Artemisia takes the female perspective
and portrays Susanna as vulnerable, frightened,
and repulsed by their demands, while the men loom
large, leering, menacing, and conspiratorial in
her direction.
47- Judith Beheading Holofernes
- 1611-12
- Oil on canvas
- 158.8 x 125.5 cm
- Museo Nazionale di Capodimonte, Naples
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49- Judith Beheading Holofernes
- 1612-21
- Oil on canvas
- 199 x 162 cm
- Galleria degli Uffizi
- Florence
50- Judith and her Maidservant
- 1612-1613
- Oil on canvas
- 114 x 93.5 cm
- Galleria Palatina (Palazzo Pitti), Florence
51- Self-Portrait as the Allegory of Painting
- 1630s
- Oil on canvas,
- 96.5 x 73.7 cm
- Royal Collection, Windsor
52- Judith and Her Maidservant
- ca. 1625
- Detroit Institute of Arts
53- After her death, she drifted into obscurity, her
works often attributed to her father or other
artists. - Art historian and expert on Artemisia, Mary D.
Garrard notes that Artemisia "has suffered a
scholarly neglect that is unthinkable for an
artist of her calibre." - Renewed and overdue interest in Artemisia in
recent years has recognized her as a talented
seventeenth-century painter and one of the
world's greatest female artists.
54The Carracci Family
- The Other Italian Baroque Painters
- Agostino Carracci
- Annibale Carracci
- Ludovico Carracci
55Carracci vs Caravaggio
- Unlike Caravaggio, the Carracci were more
interested in typically Florentine linear
draftsmanship, as exemplified by Raphael. - Their style also derived from Venetian painters
with their use of glimmering colors and mistier
edges. - The family workshop in Bologna was called upon to
paint numerous frescos, which they completed with
technical mastery not seen since Michel angelo. - Caravaggio on the other hand never painted in
fresco.
Venus and Anchises, fresco detail Galleria of the
Palazzo Farnese, Rome Annibale Carracci, 1597-1603
56Palazzo Farnese
- Based on the prolific and masterful frescoes by
the Carracci in Bologna, Annibale was recommended
by the Duke of Parma, Ranuccio Farnese, to his
brother, the Cardinal Odoardo Farnese, who wished
to decorate the piano nobile of the cavernous
Roman Palazzo Farnese in Rome - In November-December of 1595, Annibale and
Agostino traveled to Rome to begin decorating the
Camerino with stories of Hercules, appropriate
since the room housed the famous Greco-Roman
antique sculpture of the super muscular Farnese
Hercules.
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58Legacy of the CarracciItalian Baroque Ceiling
Painting
- PIETRO DA CORTONA, Glorification of the Papacy of
Urban VIII - Palazzo Barberini, 1633-3
59- Giovanni Battista Gaulli
- Triumph of the Holy Name of Jesus
- 1672-85
- Church of Il Gesu, Rome
- Jesuit Church in Rome
- Gaullis work is the most extreme example of over
the top, super illusionistic Baroque ceiling
painting.
60 - Detail of the Damned from the Triumph of the Holy
Name of Jesus - Note the twisting, contorted, foreshortened
figures.
61Gianlorenzo Bernini
- Italian Baroque Sculpture
62Bernini
- 1598- 1680
- Greatest sculptor of the Baroque period
- Also an architect, painter, playwright, composer
and theater designer. - More than any other artist, with his public
fountains, religious art, and designs for St
Peters, he left his mark on the city of Rome - Aeneas, Anchises, and Ascanius
- 1618-19
- Marble
- height c. 95 inches
- Galleria Borghese, Rome.
63- Apollo and Daphne
- 1622-25
- Marble
- height c. 100 inches
- Galleria Borghese
- Rome
64- David
- 1623-24
- Marble
- height 170 cm
- Galleria Borghese, Rome
65Renaissance David
Baroque David
66Bernini at the Vatican
67- The Baldachin
- 1624
- Bronze, partly gilt
- St. Peters Basilica
- Vatican
- A focal point of the churchs interior, is the
canopy and altar beneath the central dome,
marking the burial place of St. Peter. - It is over 100 feet high
68- The Throne of Saint Peter
- 1657-66
- Marble, bronze, white and golden stucco
- St. Peters, The Vatican
- wooden chair The crowning achievement of
Bernini's design for the decoration of St.
Peter's can be found in his later work Cathedra
Petri (Chair of St. Peter) located in the apse of
the basilica. - This large reliquary was designed to house the
original of St. Peter's.
69- Above the chair is what is commonly known as the
Glory. - This is a combination of stucco putti and angels
surrounding a stained glass window that is the
actual light source for the apse. - The window and dove act as the light and word of
God and the Holy Spirit. - Bernini diffused the light by using colored
glass and reduced the harsh glare he so detested.
70- The Ecstasy of Saint Therese
- 1647-52
- Marble, stucco, gilt bronze
- Cappella Cornaro
- Santa Maria della Vittoria Rome
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72St Peters Square and Colonnade
73- Outside Saint Peters Basilica Bernini designed
and enormous piazza and surrounded it with two
curving covered colonnades supported by rows of
four columns abreast. - Bernini intended the two arcades to be like the
Churchs maternal arms welcoming pilgrims to
Saint Peters.
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77- Bernini
- Tritone Fountain
- Rome
78- Fountain of the Four Rivers
- The Ganges
- 1648-51
- Piazza Navona
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80BorrominiDynamic Architecture
81Francesco Borromini
- What Caravaggio did for painting Borromini did
for architecture. - Just as Caravaggios figures seem to leap out at
the viewer, Borrominis undulating walls also to
come life with dramatic light and shadow. - He was a rebellious, emotionally disturbed genius
who died by suicide. - He first worked as a stone cutter for Bernini,
who became his arch rival. - His buildings often displayed an odd
juxtaposition of shapes - Convex surfaces beside concave surface made his
walls seem to ripple. - Even though his buildings seem to be a random mix
of shapes and surfaces, they are unified and
cohesive
82San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane, 1638-41
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84- Borromini
- Façade of San Carlo alle Quartro Fontane
- Rome
- Borrominis trademark was alternating convex and
concave surfaces to create the illusion of
movement.
85- FRANCESCO BORROMINI
- Plan of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane
- Rome, Italy
- 16381641.
- Not exactly a basilica plan.
86- Painting of the cupola on the Church of St Agnes
designed by Borromini in Rome
87Dome interior, San Carlo alle Quatrro Fontane
88Piazza Navona
- Original site of a stadium built by the Emperor
Domitian in 86 CE - The ruins of the stadium had been used in the
Middle Ages for festivals and as a marketplace - The family of Pope Innocent X, the Pamphilis, had
a palace facing the piazza. - The piazza became a center of urban renewal in
1652 when Pope Innocent X and the Pamphillis
decided to rebuild their palace and the Church of
Saint Agnese who was martyred here - Both Bernini and Boromini worked on the piazza
89- Four Rivers Fountain by Bernini
- Piazza Navona, Rome
90Façade of Sant Agnese in Agone by Borrominivery
Baroque, why?
91- Works referenced
- Janson, History of Art, Abrams 2001
- Marilyn Stockstads Art History Second Edition
(Volumes one and two) - Metropolitan Museum of Arts Timeline of Art
History. Available online at http//www.metmuseu
m.org/toah/splash.htm - Strickland, Carol. The Annotated Mona Lisa. 1992
- The Web Gallery of Art. Available online at
http//www.wga.hu - http//www.artchive.com/artchive/E/el_greco.html