1000 Drawings of Genius. Victoria Charles
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Название: 1000 Drawings of Genius

Автор: Victoria Charles

Издательство: Parkstone International Publishing

Жанр: Энциклопедии

Серия: The Book

isbn: 978-1-78310-949-4, 978-1-78310-457-4

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ Early Renaissance.

      30. Fra Angelico (Guido di Pietro), c. 1395–1455, Italian, King David Playing a Psaltery, c. 1430. Pen and ink, and wash, on vellum, 19.7 × 17.8 cm. British Museum, London. Early Renaissance.

      FRA ANGELICO

      (Guido di Pietro)

      (Vicchio di Mugello, c. 1395 – Rome, 1455)

      Secluded within cloister walls, a painter and a monk, and brother of the order of the Dominicans, Angelico devoted his life to religious paintings.

      Little is known of his early life except that he was born at Vicchio, in the broad fertile valley of the Mugello, not far from Florence, that his name was Guido de Pietro, and that he passed his youth in Florence, probably in some bottegha, for at twenty he was recognised as a painter. In 1418 he entered a Dominican convent in Fiesole with his brother. They were welcomed by the monks and, after a year’s novitiate, admitted to the brotherhood, Guido taking the name by which he was known for the rest of his life, Fra Giovanni da Fiesole; the title of Angelico, the “Angel,” or Il Beato, “The Blessed,” was conferred on him after his death.

      Henceforth he became an example of two personalities in one man: he was all in all a painter, but also a devout monk; his subjects were always religious ones and represented in a deeply religious spirit, yet his devotion as a monk was no greater than his absorption as an artist. Consequently, though his life was secluded within the walls of the monastery, he kept in touch with the art movements of his time and continually developed as a painter. His early work shows that he had learned of the illuminators who inherited the Byzantine traditions, and had been affected by the simple religious feeling of Giotto’s work. Also influenced by Lorenzo Monaco and the Sienese School, he painted under the patronage of Cosimo de Medici. Then he began to learn of that brilliant band of sculptors and architects who were enriching Florence with their genius. Ghiberti was executing his pictures in bronze upon the doors of the Baptistery; Donatello, his famous statue of St. George and the dancing children around the organ – gallery in the Cathedral; and Luca della Robbia was at work upon his frieze of children, singing, dancing and playing upon instruments. Moreover, Masaccio had revealed the dignity of form in painting. Through these artists, the beauty of the human form and of its life and movement was being manifested to the Florentines and to the other cities. Angelico caught the enthusiasm and gave increasing reality of life and movement to his figures.

      31. Circle of Jan van Eyck (c. 1390–1441), Flemish, Saint Paul, c. 1430. Pen and brown ink, point of the brush and brown ink, with purple and gold heightening, on vellum, 14.6 × 7.9 cm. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Northern Renaissance.

      32. Fra Angelico (Guido di Pietro), c. 1395–1455, Italian, Christ on the Cross, c. 1430. Pen and brown ink, with red and yellow wash on parchment, 29.3 × 19 cm. Albertina, Vienna. Early Renaissance.

      33. Stefano da Verona (Stefano di Giovanni), c. 1374–1438, Italian, Three Standing Figures, 1435–1438. Pen and brown ink over traces of charcoal or black chalk, 30 × 22.4 cm. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Early Renaissance.

      34. Konrad Witz, c. 1400–1445, Swiss, Virgin and Child in an Interior, date unknown. Pen, brown ink and wash, 29.1 × 20 cm. Kupferstichkabinett, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Berlin. Northern Renaissance.

      35. Stefano da Verona (Stefano di Giovanni), c. 1374–1438, Italian, The Virgin with Christ Child and St. John the Baptist, 1420–1430. Pen and ink on watermarked white paper, 22.4 × 14.3 cm. Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence. Early Renaissance.

      36. Pisanello (Antonio Pisano), c. 1395–1455, Italian, Three Monkeys in Different Postures, Sketch and Head of Another Monkey, c. 1430. Silverpoint on paper, 20.6 × 21.7 cm. Musée du Louvre, Paris. Early Renaissance.

      37. Jan van Eyck, c. 1390–1441, Flemish, Portrait of Cardinal Niccolo Albergati, c. 1435. Silverpoint on paper, 21.2 × 18 cm. Kupferstich-Kabinett, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden, Dresden. Northern Renaissance.

      JAN VAN EYCK

      (Near Maastricht, c. 1390 – Bruges, 1441)

      Little is known of the brothers Hubert and Jan van Eyck, even the dates of their births being uncertain. Jan, as perhaps also Hubert, was for a time in the service of Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy. He was entered in the household as ‘varlet and painter’, but acted at the same time as a confidential friend, and for his services received an annual salary of two horses for his use, and a ‘varlet in livery’ to attend on him. The greater part of his life was spent in Bruges.

      Their wonderful use of colour is another reason of the fame of the van Eycks. Artists came from Italy to study their pictures, to discover what they themselves must do in order to paint so well, with such brilliance, such full and firm effect, as these two brothers. For the latter had found out the secret of working successfully with oil colours. Before their time, attempts had been made to mix colours in the medium of oil, but the oil was slow in drying, and the varnish added to remedy this had blackened the colours. The van Eycks, however, had hit upon a transparent varnish which dried quickly and without injury to the tints. Though they guarded the secret jealously, it was discovered by the Italian, Antonello da Messina, who was working in Bruges, and through him published to the world. The invention made possible the enormous development in the art of painting which ensued.

      In these two brothers the grand art of Flanders was born. Like “the sudden flowering of the aloe, after sleeping through a century of suns,” this art, rooted in the native soil, nurtured by the smaller arts of craftsmanship, reached its full ripeness and expanded into blossom. Such further development as it experienced came from Italian influence, but the distinctly Flemish art, born out of local conditions in Flanders, was already fully-grown.

      38. Pisanello (Antonio Pisano), c. 1395–1455, Italian, Castle and Landscape, 1440–1450. Sinopia. Museo di Palazzo Ducale, Mantua. Early Renaissance.

      39. Circle of Rogier van der Weyden (c. 1399–1464), Flemish, Men Shoveling Chairs, 1444–1450. Pen and brown ink over traces of black chalk, 30 × 42.6 cm. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Northern Renaissance.

      40. Paolo Uccello (Paolo di Dono), 1397–1475, Italian, Study for the Monument to John Hawkwood, c. 1436. Metalpoint and white lead on squared paper, 46.1 × 33.3 cm. Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence. Early Renaissance.

      PAOLO UCCELLO

      (Paolo di Dono)

      (Florence, 1397–1475)

      Paolo di Dono was called ‘Uccello’ because he loved birds and the Italian word for bird is uccello. As well as painting on panel and in fresco, he was also a master of mosaics, especially in Venice, and produced designs for stained СКАЧАТЬ