Title: Agenda
1Agenda
- To Do
- Opener you will need half sheet of paper
- Louis the XIV and Ballet
- Spanish Baroque Visual Art
- Architecture Reading
- Exit Slip Questions use your notes!
- A4 sit where the chairs are arranged.
- Dont move them! I want you spaced out.
2Opener Part 1 Baroque Music(on your own paper,
leave in your opener section)
- Identify the name and composer of each song
- 1.)
- 2.)
- 3.)
3Opener Part II
- 4. Name the piece and the artist who sculpted it.
- 5. Name the piece and the artist who sculpted it.
4- 6. Name the piece and the artist who painted it.
- 7. Name the piece and the artist who painted it.
5- 8. Name the piece and the artist who painted it.
What is significant about this artist?
6Ballet Louis XIV the Sun King
- development during
- the Baroque Period
7Ballet
- Is a play in dance form in which music also plays
a major part in telling a story or conveying a
mood. - Western ballet as we know it today first appeared
in Renaissance Italy, where it was used as
entertainment for the royalty in between opera
acts.
8Ballet
- Catherine de' Medici took it to France in the
form of a show combining singing, dancing, and
declamation. - During the 18th century there were major
developments in technique and ballet gradually
became divorced from opera, emerging as an art
form in its own right.
9History
- The first important dramatic ballet was produced
in 1581. - It was performed by male courtiers (members of
the court), with ladies of the court forming the
corps de ballet (group of dancers who are not
soloists).
10History
- In 1661 Louis XIV founded the Académie Royale de
Danse. All subsequent ballet activities
throughout the world can be traced to this
academy.
11History
- The dancers wore long, flowing court dresses
until the 1720s when the first great ballerina
shortened her skirt to reveal her ankles,
allowing greater movement.
During the 18th century ballet spread to
virtually every major capital in Europe.
http//www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/h
utchinson/m0003074.html
12Louis XIV the Sun King
- Louis XIV was born in 1638. He was only five
when he became king on the death of his father,
Louis XIII. His mother held the regency while he
grew up.
Louis XIV at ten years of age
13Louis and Ballet
- The young king made his ballet debut as a boy,
but it was in 1653 that he accomplished his most
memorable feat as a dancer. - He performed Le Ballet de la Nuit and for his
final piece he appeared as Apollo. Wearing a
fancy kilt of golden rays he came to be known as
the Sun King.
www.royalcollection.org.uk/egallery/images/collect
ion_large/913071.jpg
14Louis and Ballet
- Pierre Beauchamps, one of the most famous
"fathers" of ballet, was "superintendent of the
king's ballets.
He has been given credit for standardizing the
five foot positions of ballet, (first through
fifth positions). DO THEM! AGAIN!
15Louis and Ballet
- The ballet master he imported from Italy was
Giovanni Baptista Lulli, who was rechristened
Jean Baptiste Lully
In 1661 Louis established the Académie Royale de
Danse in a room of the Louvre.
16Louis and Ballet
- In 1669 Louis XIV established the Académie Royale
de Musique for Lully to run. - In 1670 once he was past his physical prime, the
king retired from dancing, allowing other, better
dancers to take lead roles.
17Lullys Ballet
In 1672 Lully established a dance academy within
the Académie Royale de Musique. This dance
company survives today as the ballet of the Paris
Opera
- the world's oldest continuously running ballet
company.
18Lullys Ballet
- Lully's seriousness towards the study of dance
led to the development of professional dancers as
opposed to courtiers who could dance.
19Lullys Ballet
- In 1687 Lully died from an injury he received by
accidentally stabbing his foot with his time
marking stick. - At this time, ballet was normally performed in
the same productions as opera, a theatrical form
known as opéra-ballet.
20Choreography
In 1700 Choréographie, ou l'art de décrire la
danse (Choreography, or the Art of Writing Dance)
was published by Raoul Auger Feuillet. In this
book he attempted to create a dance notation
similar to music. Although this notation was
never finalized and standardized, it is the
system that is still in use today as no other
system has been developed.
21Choreography
- The word choréographie gives us the English word
choreography and is derived from the greek
khorea, (to dance), and graphein, (to write).
22- Academies
- -state-sponsored schools
- -trained artists and performers
- -set standards of taste
- -based on Platos academy
- -imposed conservative rules on the arts
23Theater
- Controlled by academy
- 5 acts
- Obey unity of time/place
- Uplifting moral
- Jean Racine
- Moliere
- Tartuffe
24Spanish Baroque Visual Art
25El Greco The Greek
- 1541-1614
- painter
- Domenikos Theotocopoulos
- Trained in Venice, Italy
- Applied Renaissance technique to intense
religiosity - The Burial of Count Orgaz
26The Burial of Count Orgaz
27Diego Velazquez
- 1599-1660
- Master painter at age 18
- realism through bold color/brushwork
- Painted images directly, no outlines
- Only well-known Spanish Baroque artist
- Las Meninas (Maids of Honor)
- Triangular composition
- Use of light
28Las Meninas
29Baroque Architecture Reading
30Review/Exit Slip
- Under Louis the XIV, who developed a school for
the arts such as dance and drama? - Which palace of Louis the XIV is now the most
famous museum in the world? - St. Pauls Cathedral, in London, is a mix of what
three architecture styles? - In what country is the Palace of Versailles
located? - What did the ground plan of Escorial Palace, in
Spain, represent? - In what country did ballet first appear?
31(No Transcript)
32- Beginning of Neoclassical Art
- -rules for art
- -based on classical forms
- -1600 to 1700s
- -France and England
33Jean Racine
- -1639-1699
- -tragedy
- -rhymed verse
- -stories from Greek tragedy
- -criticized for being too realistic
34Moliere Jean-Baptiste Poquelin
- -1622-1673
- -comedy
- -used wit to attack hypocrisy/vice of French
society - -performed at the Louvre and Versailles
- -Tartuffe
- -story of a religious hypocrite