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Ch. 15: The Baroque World

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Title: Ch. 15: The Baroque World Author: rbaskin Last modified by: rbaskin Created Date: 11/8/2004 12:26:03 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch. 15: The Baroque World


1
Ch. 15 The Baroque World
2
Featured Works Berninis piazza at St.
Peters Carravaggios The Calling of
St. Matthew Handels Overture to
Fireworks Bachs Toccata and Fugue in
D minor Rembrandts The Anatomy Lecture of Dr.
Nicolaes Tulp John Donnes The Flea
  • Terms
  • Baroque
  • Piazza
  • Façade
  • Chiaroscuro
  • Aria, oratorio, overture, sonata, fugue, cantata,
    and orchestral movement
  • Cogito, ergo sum
  • Tabula rasa
  • Metaphysical poets

Other Important Works Palace at
Versailles Borrominis church of San Carlo (in
Rome) Berninis David Gentileschis Judith and
Holofernes Scientist Galileo Philosophers
Descartes, Hobbes, and Locke
3
Meaning of Baroque
  • The Baroque period (17th c.) was largely an
    extension of Renaissance Humanism accompanied by
    continued religious controversy (Catholicism vs.
    Protestantism).
  • The Baroque period is characterized by the
    increased emphasis on the individual. As your
    book says, baroque artists were united in their
    commitment to strong emotional statements,
    psychological exploration, and the invention of
    new and daring techniques that highlighted
    individual talents (359). Keep these general
    statements in mind as you focus on a few key
    people and developments.

4
Architecture and Sculpture
  • Bernini Sometimes the emotional/psychological
    emphasis of the period was expressed through
    grandeur, scope, and awe. His completion of St.
    Peters Basilica and of the creation of the
    piazza in front of it is one of the most famous
    examples of the Baroque spirit in architecture.
    (See next two slides.)

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8
  • A similar example is the Palace at Versailles,
    built for the French king Louis XIV. What was
    the political function of this grandeur? (See
    also figures 15.17 and 15.1 in book.)

9
  • Borrominis church of San Carlo alle Quattro
    Fontane, in Rome, exemplifies the interest in new
    techniques and in a more elaborate, emotional
    architecture. Note the many visual elements
    crowded into a relatively small space.

10
  • Compare Berninis David to Donnatellos and
    Michelangelos. How does Berninis rendering
    exhibit Baroque characteristics?

11
Painting
  • For each of the paintings below, be able to
    identify its Humanist and its Baroque
    characteristics
  • Caravaggios The Calling of Saint Matthew.
    (Define chiaroscuro.)
  • Gentileschis Judith and Holofernes.
  • Rembrandts The Anatomy Lecture of Dr. Nicolaes
    Tulp (1632, next slide).

12
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13
Music Instrumental and Vocal
  • What, broadly speaking, is significant about the
    Baroque period for the history of music? (first
    two paragraphs on p. 378)
  • Define music terms on second slide. (Remember
    that there is a glossary in the back of your
    book. You may wish to use other sources that
    provide more information.)
  • For both Handel and Bach, record some key details
    about their musical careers and abilities.

14
Science, Philosophy, and Literature
  • Identify each mans cultural significance
    primary work and key ideas, explaining relevant
    terms from list in slide 1 and nationality.
  • Galileo Galilei
  • Rene Descartes

15
  • Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan
  • John Locke, An Essay Concerning Human
    Understanding
  • John Donne, a Metaphysical Poet, and The Flea.
    (Read poem on next two slides. Interpretation
    hint The speaker wants to make love to the woman
    to whom he is speaking, and his comments on a
    flea that has jumped on her are his way of
    persuading her.)

16
John Donnes The Flea
  • Marke but this flea, and marke in this, How
    little that which thou deny'st me is Me it
    suck'd first, and now sucks thee, And in this
    flea our two bloods mingled bee Confesse it,
    this cannot be said A sinne, or shame, or losse
    of maidenhead,
  • Yet this enjoyes before it wooe, And pamper'd
    swells with one blood made of two, And this,
    alas, is more than wee would doe.
  • Oh stay, three lives in one flea spare, When
    we almost, nay more than maryed are. This flea
    is you and I, and this Our marriage bed, and
    marriage temple is Though parents grudge, and
    you, w'are met, And cloysterd in these living
    walls of Jet. (cont.)

17
  • Though use make thee apt to kill me, Let not to
    this, selfe murder added bee, And sacrilege,
    three sinnes in killing three.
  • Cruell and sodaine, has thou since Purpled thy
    naile, in blood of innocence? In what could this
    flea guilty bee, Except in that drop which it
    suckt from thee? Yet thou triumph'st, and saist
    that thou Find'st not thyself, nor mee the
    weaker now
  • 'Tis true, then learne how false, feares bee
    Just so much honor, when thou yeeld'st to mee,
    Will wast, as this flea's death tooke life from
    thee.
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