Main

March 11, 2009

Ode to the Bard

I was unaware that there were no images of William Shakespeare that could be attributed to having been done in his lifetime, until my DH sent me this article Portrait of Shakespeare unveiled 399 years too late.

This is a story of a portrait that languished in a family collection for centuries and no one knew who it was a portrait of until one day, a member of the family saw another portrait that looked eerily familiar. So now we have the true image of the face that launched hundreds of characters into our imaginations and our history. You're a sharp looking, dude, William!

December 12, 2007

December 12 - A History of Art - Fra Angelico - The Annunciation

Fra Angelico, (c. 1395 – February 18, 1455) was an Early Italian Renaissance painter, referred to in Vasari's Lives of the Artists as having "a rare and perfect talent".

Fra Angelico was a Dominican monk within a teaching order, and his work served a didactic rather than purely mystical purpose. His style is simple. In 1438, he and his assistants began painting a series of 50 frescoes to decorate the monks' cells at the monastery of San Marco in Florence. The Annuciation is one of these frescoes.

The frescoes were created as aids to prayer and contemplation. Their straightforward composition, limited color, and lack of superfluous detail give them a humble grandeur and serenity. Although Fra Angelico uses the realism and perspectival techniques learned from Masaccio, his haloes and wings are flat, painted in the Gothic Style.

Fra Angelico was later commissioned to work at the Vatican, where his frescoes were more ornate, with an emphasis on narrative and detail and that was deemed more appropriate for a public place.

Fra Angelico was beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1982

Continue reading "December 12 - A History of Art - Fra Angelico - The Annunciation" »

December 11, 2007

December 11 - A History of Art - Luca Della Robbia

Today, we leave the gothic medieval art and move into Early Renaissance. Luca della Robbia came from a family of artists. He is chiefly remembered for the glazed terracotta plaquettes that he introduced as a sculptural medium. The family studio kept the terracotta formula a secret, enabling him to establish a flourishing business. Della Robbia also developed a pottery glaze that made his creations more durable in the outdoors and thus suitable for use on the exterior of buildings.

One of his most famous works is the cantoria, or singing gallery, in Florence Cathedral, which shows a cheerful rendition of cherub musicians relfecting antique prototypes. It is paired with cantoria designed by the sculptor Donatello.

Another beautiful piece is the blue-and-white Madonna and Child terracottta reliefs which show that della Robia's major concern was to represent three-dimensional shape on a flat plane.

Continue reading "December 11 - A History of Art - Luca Della Robbia" »

December 10, 2007

December 10 - A History of Art - Ambrogio Lorenzetti Effects of Good Government

Ambrogio Lorenzetti(1313-1348) was a Sienese painter and the younger brother of the artist of Pietro, who may have been his teacher. His style owes much to the realism of Giotto(1267-1337).Lorenzetti painted rounded figurines and showed a regard for space and depth, although the scale of the background is not always accurate. Interestingly, in the early 15th century, architect Filippo Brunelleschi (1337-1446) worked out the mathematical rules of perspective, pictures were composed by eye alone.

The pair of frescoes which show The Allegory of Good and Bad Government was commissioned as a piece of civic propaganda fo the Sala dei Nove in the Palazzo Pubblico, Siena. Both works were extraordinary at the time for showing a contemporary panorama of a real place with real people.


Effects of Good Life

Effects of Bad Life

The Effects of Good Government shows Siena as a place of peace and prosperity, with evidence of commerce, active building, agriculture, and industry. After 1348, there are no further records of either brother being active and it is thought that they both perished from the Black Death.

Continue reading "December 10 - A History of Art - Ambrogio Lorenzetti Effects of Good Government" »

December 9, 2007

December 9 - A History of Art - Maesta by Duccio Di Buoninsegna

Duccio Di Buoninsegna was from Siena, a city that had a great cultural rivalry with its close neighbor, Florence. As Italian art moved away from the Byzantine style, the Sienese school turned toward a decorative, almost courtly art, based on Byzantine traditions, but marked by its use of color and attention to detail.

The Maesta (meaning Majesty) was commissioned in 1308and was installed in Siena Cathedral in 1311. It was one of the largest panel paintings ever made in Italy.

In the first image above, you can see the whole panel. It portrays the Madonna and Child surrounded with saints. Around the and on the back are smaller scenes showing dramatic narratives from the life of Christ.

The second image shows a close up of Madonna and child. Look how old of a face they put on the Baby Jesus. Perhaps designed to symbolize his wisdom or perhaps, just the style of the time.

Continue reading "December 9 - A History of Art - Maesta by Duccio Di Buoninsegna" »

December 8, 2007

December 8 - A History of Art - Giotto

Yesterday, when we looked at the Santa Trinita Madonna, we left early medieval art and entered the Gothic Medieval period of art. Today, we will look at more gothic medieval art by Giotto Di Bondone (a student of Cimabue).

The Florentine painter Giotto is one of the most important artists in the history of Western art. He was the first artist of the medieval period to approach the human figure as a sculptural mass inhabiting its own space. He also left behind the saccharine sweetness found in the work of many earlier medieval artists. Instead, you will find the 'real emotions' of the subjects being portrayed. He wasn't just a painter, but he was also a talented sculptor and architect.

In spite of his fame and the demand for his services, no surviving painting is documented as being by him. His work, indeed, poses some formidable problems of attribution, but it is universally agreed that the fresco cycle in the Arena Chapel at Padua is by Giotto, and it forms the starting-point for any consideration of his work. The Arena Chapel (so-called because it occupies the site of a Roman arena) was built by Enrico Scrovegni in expiation for the sins of his father, a notorious usurer mentioned by Dante. It was begun in 1303 and Giotto's frescos are usually dated c. 1305-06. They run right round the interior of the building; the west wall is covered with a Last Judgement, there is an Annunciation over the chancel arch, and the main wall areas have three tiers of paintings representing scenes from the life of the Virgin and her parents, St Anne and St Joachim, and events from the Passion of Christ. Below these scenes are figures personifying Virtues and Vices, painted to simulate stone reliefs -- the first grisailles. The figures in the main narrative scenes are about half-size, but in reproduction they usually look bigger because Giotto's conception is so grand and powerful. His figures have a completely new sense of three-dimensionality and physical presence, and in portraying the sacred events he creates a feeling of moral weight rather than divine splendor. He seems to base the representations upon personal experience, and no artist has surpassed his ability to go straight to the heart of a story and express its essence with gestures and expressions of unerring conviction.

The other major fresco cycle associated with Giotto's name is that on the Life of St Francis in the Upper Church of S. Francesco at Assisi. Whether Giotto painted this is not only the central problem facing scholars of his work, but also one of the most controversial issues in the history of art. The St Francis frescos are clearly the work of an artist of great stature (their intimate and humane portrayals have done much to determine posterity's mental image of the saint), but the stylistic differences between these works and the Arena Chapel frescos seem to many critics so pronounced that they cannot accept a common authorship. Attempts to attribute other frescos at Assisi to Giotto have met with no less controversy.


Continue reading "December 8 - A History of Art - Giotto" »

December 7, 2007

December 7 - A History of Art - Cimabue Santa Trinita Madonna

Cenni di Peppi, known as Cimabue, is traditionally believed to have been Giotto's teacher and is credited with preparing the ground for the naturalism of Giotto's revolutionary style. Not much is known of Cimabue's life.

Judging this by the commissions that he received, Cimabue appears to have been a highly-regarded artist in his day.

Cimabue was commissioned to paint two very large frescoes for the Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi. They are on the walls of the transepts: a Crucifixion and a Deposition. Unfortunately these works are now dim shadows of their original appearance. During occupancy of the building by invading French troops, straw caught fire, severely damaging the frescoes. The white paint was partially composed of silver, which oxidised and turned black, leaving the faces and much of the drapery of the figures in negative.

Among Cimabue's few surving works are the Madonna of Santa Trinita, once in the church of Santa Trinita, and now housed, with Duccio's Rucellai Madonna and Giotto's Ognissanti Madonna, in the Uffizi Gallery.

In the Lower Church of Saint Francis in Assisi is an extremely important fresco, depicting The Madonna and Christ Child enthroned with angels and Saint Francis. It is claimed to be a work of Cimabue's old age.


Continue reading "December 7 - A History of Art - Cimabue Santa Trinita Madonna" »

December 6, 2007

December 6 - A History of Art - Pietro Cavallini - The Last Judgment

Pietro Cavallini was active from 1273 to 1308. He was in all likelihood a leading artist of his time. His two major surviving works are mosaics of the Life of the Virgin (Sta Maria in Trastevere, signed and dated 1291) and a fragmentary fresco cycle, the most important part of which is a Last Judgement (Sta Cecilia in Trastevere, Rome).

He was the first artist to make a significant break with the stylizations of Byzantine art, and his majestic figures have a real sense of weight and three-dimensionality. His work undoubtedly influenced his great contemporary Giotto, whose Last Judgement in the Arena Chapel at Padua features Apostles enthroned exactly as in Cavallini's fresco of the subject.

The Last Judgment (detail of The Apostles); 1295-1300 (60 Kb); Wall painting; Santa Cecilia at Trastevere, Rome

For other detailed images of The Last Judgment, check out Web Gallery of Art. If you click on the thumbnail size images, you will go to a much larger and more detailed image of this artwork. Not only did Cavallini move away from the Byzantine style with the pale colors that he used, but his work was notable for the individuality of the faces personifying Christ and his apostles. Each was painted to reflect the man's character and not to be the archetypal ideal.

Continue reading "December 6 - A History of Art - Pietro Cavallini - The Last Judgment" »

December 4, 2007

December 4 - A History of Art - The Bayeux Tapestry

The Bayeux Tapestry (French: Tapisserie de Bayeux) is a 50 cm by 70 m (20 in by 230 ft) long embroidered cloth which depicts the events leading up to the 1066 Norman invasion of England as well as the events of the invasion itself. The Tapestry is annotated in Latin. It is presently exhibited in a special museum in Bayeux, Normandy, France.

Since the earliest known written reference to the tapestry in a 1476 inventory of Bayeux Cathedral, its origins have been the subject of much speculation and controversy.

In France, traditional legend said that the tapestry was commissioned and created by Queen Matilda, William the Conqueror's wife, and her ladies.

However, recent scholarly analysis in the 20th century shows it probably was commissioned by William the Conqueror's half brother, Bishop Odo. The reasons for the Odo commission theory include: three of the bishop's followers mentioned in Domesday Book appear on the tapestry; it was found in Bayeux Cathedral, built by Odo; it may have been commissioned at the same time as the cathedral's construction in the 1070's, possibly completed by 1077 in time for display on the cathedral's dedication.

Continue reading "December 4 - A History of Art - The Bayeux Tapestry" »

December 3, 2007

December 3 - A History of Art - The Book of Kells

As I continue through the pages of History of Art by Kirsten Bradbury, I see page after page of beautifully illustrated Gospels in the Early Medieval Time. I do not know if that was the only art to survive from that time period or if it was simply the most prevalent. I am simply following along in this book which I am using as a guide as I try to learn a little about the world of art. I love looking at the beautiful ways the Bible has been illustrated in times past. Can you begin to imagine the painstaking work of creating this beautiful work!?

The Book of Kells contains the four gospels in Latin and was created by Irish monks living at Iona, an island in Scotland's Inner Hebrides. The pages are made of vellum and decorated with richly colored dyes, some imported from the Middle East. Monks created such wors as a sign of their obedience and devotion to God. They believed that the Word of God should be recorded within scenes of beauty.

The Viking invasions caused the monks to flee to Kells in Ireland, leaving the Book of Kells unfinished.


This page opens the Gospel of John

Continue reading "December 3 - A History of Art - The Book of Kells" »

December 2, 2007

December 2 - A History of Art - The Apocalypse of Beatus

The eighth century was a time of great upheaval in Spain. The Muslims’ invasion of 711 and the emergence of several heretical theologies had wreaked havoc on the orthodox Catholic church, and medieval calculations of world chronology indicated that the end of the world would come in the year 800. It was in this uncertain environment that Beatus, a staunchly orthodox monk from the monastery of San Martín de Turieno in Liébana in northern Spain, compiled the text that would become the basis for some of the most important works of Spanish art ever produced.

Beatus was an abbot who lived in Liebana, northern Spain. In around 776, he wrote his masterpiece, a manuscript describing the apocalypse - the biblical end of the world. The theme was a common one for scholars and religious leaders. Beatus' Apocalypse was an extremely popular version of the story, which was reporduced by monastic communities for their own use. His work was passed down through generations of scholars and there are now 25 surviving copies, produced between the 10th and 13th centuries.

The information for this post came from

History of Art by Kirsten Bradbury

American Federation of Arts

And you can see more images and gather more information of the various surviving Beatus works at Wikipedia and Online Gallery of European Manuscripts

December 1, 2007

December 1 - A History of Art - The Lindisfarne Gospels

Today's art work is an example of early medieval art. In the first half of the 7th century, Irish missionary Saint Aidan arrived in Northumbrian from Iona. He founded a monastery at Lindisfarne, where the Lindisfarne Gospels were created by Irish monks. Their spectacular illuminations and jewel-encrusted binding reflect the importance of God's word, spoken through the Bible. Costly in time and materials, superb in design, the manuscript is among our greatest artistic and religious treasures.

the Lindisfarne Gospels is the work of one remarkably gifted artist who produced both words and images, giving the manuscript a particularly coherent sense of design. According to a note added at the end of the manuscript less than a century after its making, that artist was a monk called Eadfrith, who was Bishop of Lindisfarne between 698 and 721.

His superb skill and power of invention are strikingly evident in the opening pages of each gospel. A painting of the gospel’s Evangelist is followed by a ‘carpet’ page, so-called because the whole page is covered with intricate pattern. Next is the ‘incipit’ page, that is, an opening page in which the first letters of the gospels are greatly elaborated with interlacing and spiral patterns strongly influenced by Anglo-Saxon jewellery and enamel work.

The outline of the design was drawn on the reverse of the page, which was then lit from behind so the design could be painted on the correct side. Eadfrith employed an exceptionally wide range of colours, using animal, vegetable and mineral pigments.

This extravagance was a measure of the status accorded at the time to this magnificent manuscript. It was an enormous act of faith on the part of Bishop Eadfrith. In some places the manuscript remains partly unfinished, suggesting Eadfrith’s cherished work was ended prematurely by his death in 721.


Continue reading "December 1 - A History of Art - The Lindisfarne Gospels" »

November 30, 2007

November 30th - A History of Art -Byzantine Art

Byzantine art is the term commonly used to describe the artistic products of the Byzantine Empire from about the 5th century until the Fall of Constantinople in 1453. During the classical period, artists tried very hard to make their pictures look as realistic as possible. Byzantine art was more abstract and anti-natural. To me it looks 'flat.' Having said that, the colors are beautiful and the art detailed.

Here are some examples:

Continue reading "November 30th - A History of Art -Byzantine Art" »

November 29, 2007

November 29th - A History of Art - Bronze Horses at the Basilica Di San Marco, Venice


Basilica Di San Marco

Basilica di San Marco (Saint Mark's Basilica), church in Venice that was begun in its original form in 829 (consecrated in 832) as an ecclesiastical structure to house and honour the remains of St. Mark that had been brought from Alexandria. St. Mark thereupon replaced St. Theodore as the patron saint of Venice, and his attribute of a winged lion in time became the official symbol of the Venetian Republic. San Marco Basilica, built beside the Palazzo Ducale, or Doges' Palace, also served as the doge's chapel. It did not become the cathedral church of Venice until 1807.

The first basilica was burned in 976 during a popular revolt against the doge Pietro Candiano IV but was restored under his successor, Doge Domenico Contarini (d. c. 1070); the present basilica was completed in 1071. The plan is a Greek cross, and the building is surmounted by five domes. The design is distinctly Byzantine, and it is likely that both Byzantine and Italian architects and craftsmen were employed in the construction and decoration. Over the centuries, additions of sculpture, mosaics, and ceremonial objects have increased the church's richness. The famed four bronze horses on the west facade gallery, for example, were brought to Venice at the time of the Fourth Crusade (1204) from Constantinople, where they had been part of a Greco-Roman triumphal quadriga (a sculpture of a car or chariot drawn by four horses abreast). Though originally placed in the Arsenal, they were set up in the mid-13th century on the exterior of San Marco. They were removed to Paris by Napoleon but were returned in 1815.

The interior is decorated throughout with mosaics on gold ground and with many varieties of marble; the floor is of inlaid marble and glass. In the restricted light their colours glow. The screen separating the choir from the nave has marble statues, masterpieces of Venetian Gothic sculpture by Jacobello and Pier Paolo dalle Masegne.


San Marco Altarpiece

The Campanile, separated from the church, was originally begun under the doge Pietro Tribuno (d. 912). It was adapted into its present familiar form early in the 16th century. In 1902 it collapsed but by 1912 had been rebuilt on its original site.

Continue reading "November 29th - A History of Art - Bronze Horses at the Basilica Di San Marco, Venice" »

November 28, 2007

November 28th - A History of Art - Pompeii

Pompeii...a city frozen in time by a mass catastrophe. Can you imagine the amazement of those who discovered Pompeii in 1748....1700 years after life had virtually stopped in a moment? This tragic story does have a happy ending. It preserved a moment in time for future generations to explore and to learn from. We know what they ate, how their homes were designed, and what we wore. And we are able to study the art that was preserved through the centuries.

The town appears to have been moderatly wealthy and every house was decorated with wall paintings. Mosaics were also very common. Artwork found in Pompeii is known as Campanian Art, and is representative of all southern Italian paintint at the time. As Pompeii was then under Roman rule, it is also indicative of Roman art at this time, which had been heavily influenced by earlier Greek art.

This particular fresco was painted onto a wall adjacent to the baker's house, and many believe that it depicts the baker, Paquius Proculus, and his wife. Others contend that the man may be a wealthy lawyer named Terentius Neus. The couple appear to be upper class; the woman is elegantly dressed and coiffed, while he sports a white toga and carries a scroll.

Continue reading "November 28th - A History of Art - Pompeii" »

November 27, 2007

November 27th - The History of Art - Etruscan Art

Today, we are going to move from Greece to Italy and look at the Classical Art of the Etruscans. Etruscan civilization flourished in western Italy from c.900- c. 100 BC. Ancient Etruria encompassed modern Tuscany and parts of Umbria.

Etruscan art was mostly figurative art. They used terracotta, bronze, and wall-painting for most of their artistic endeavors.Etruscan art was influenced by the Asian, Greeks, and Roman civilizations. Red-figure painting was a technique for decorating pottery that had been initiated in Athens during the Greek period and remained common practice during Roman times. Prior to that, the decorative method had been "black-figure painting," in which artists painted their work in black pigment onto a base of red clay.

Continue reading "November 27th - The History of Art - Etruscan Art" »

November 26, 2007

November 26th - The History of Art - Greek Sculpture

We are leaving behind a dabbling of ancient art and heading into the Classical art period. (If this is the first history of art post you have happened on, check my sidebar for the Art History category and see what else I have shared).

One huge difference between Greek sculptures and the earlier Egyptian Sculptures is the fact that Greek sculpture was free standing. Where Egyptian sculpture tended to be part of a block of stone, the Greek sculptor cut away any unneeded part of stone. This left spaces between the arms and the body, between the legs and this made a sculpture appear more lifelike.

By 400 BC, Greek sculptures had evolved from rigid poses to fluid ones which included garment folds, curly hair and musculature. These sculptures, while not completely life-like were very close and seemed as though the sculpture could get up and walk away.

Continue reading "November 26th - The History of Art - Greek Sculpture" »

November 25, 2007

November 25th - The History of Art - Egyptian Art - King Tut

When Howard Carter found King Tut's tomb he gave the world a priceless treasure. So many of the tombs of the pharoahs had been ransacked in ancient history and there were more holes in our understanding of Ancient Egypt than there was substance. Take a virtual tour of King Tut's tomb.

I have always been fascinated with Egypt and hope to one day visit. The pyramids, the Sphinx, the Valley of the Kings...these things beckon me. The mysteries they still hold, call out to be answered. I loved the movie The Mummy because I could relate to the character played by Rachel Weiss. The treasures, the scrolls, the hieroglyphics that we have uncovered point to such an amazing civilization that in so many ways seems so far ahead of its time.

And the art that has come out of ancient Egypt has been some of the most spectacular the world has ever known. Take for instance the Death Mask of Tutankhamun. He was a minor pharoah in the grand scheme of things. A boy who was murdered after only 9 years on the throne. But even with his reign having such insignificance, his death mask and all the treasures that filled his tomb were spectacular.

Continue reading "November 25th - The History of Art - Egyptian Art - King Tut" »

November 24, 2007

November 24th - History of Art - Palace of Minos

Welcome to Day 2 of my History of Art posts. Yesterday we learned about the Cave Drawings in Lascaux, France.

Today we are going to travel about 12,000 years in time and south to visit the Minoan Civilization. The Minoan Civilization flourished from around 3000-1000BC. The Palace of Minos at Knossos, in Crete was one of three built by the early Minoans. It was ruined when an earthquake devastated the entire area in 1700 BC. The palaces were rebuilt, but destroyed again in 1450 BC by another earthquake. Minoan civilization collapsed at about the same time and the area was settled by the Mycenaeans.


Throne of King Minos

According to Greek Mythology Knossos Palace is the legendary site of Theseus fighting the Minotaur, Ariadne and her ball of string, Daedalus the architect and doomed Icarus of the wax wings.

Continue reading "November 24th - History of Art - Palace of Minos" »

November 23, 2007

November 23rd - The History of Art - Lascaux Cave Paintings

I love blogging. I love writing. I love learning and sharing things that I learn. Blogs are a great place to do that. That is why I share interesting animal news. I am fascinated by the diverse life on this planet.

Something else that I am really interested in is art. I am art ignorant. I took an Art History class my freshman year in college and was quickly overwhelmed and ended up taking it pass/fail. The only course in my college career that I did that with. Our professor showed us slides twice a week for 1 1/2 hours...rapidly and I was soon completely and irrevocably lost. My professor was trying to teach us about all the art of the world in just about 36 hours total! This class left a bad taste in my mouth and I was certain that art was beyond my reach.

Age brings wisdom though (sometimes). I realized that I could learn a bit about art and that what was important was that there is different art for everyone. I mean, I don't care for Picasso (and that's okay), but there are plenty of other artists that I am learning to appreciate.

Since I like learning and sharing and I thought I would start a daily column where I take you through the history of art (and I can learn at the same time). Sounds like a win-win situation to me:)

Continue reading "November 23rd - The History of Art - Lascaux Cave Paintings" »