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  • Empires - The Medici: Godfathers of the Renaissance
    Empires - The Medici: Godfathers of the Renaissance
    A fascinating and highly entertaining look at one of the most important families of the Renaissance era--the Medici.
  • Sister Wendy - The Complete Collection (Story of Painting / Grand Tour / Odyssey / Pains of Glass)
    Sister Wendy - The Complete Collection (Story of Painting / Grand Tour / Odyssey / Pains of Glass)

    “Sister Wendy Beckett has transformed public appreciation of art through her astonishing knowledge, insight and passion for painting and painters.” This set includes Sister Wendy's Story of Painting, Sister Wendy's Odyssey, and Sister Wendy's Grand Tour. Simultaneously delightful and scholarly--this is a must have for anyone interested in art history.

  • Exit Through the Gift Shop
    Exit Through the Gift Shop
    When British stencil artist Banksy traveled to Los Angeles to work, he came across obscure French filmmaker Thierry Guetta and his badly organized collection of videotapes involving the activities of graffiti artists. Inspired, Banksy assembled them with new footage to create this talked-about documentary, and the result is a mind-boggling and odd film (so strange as to be thought a hoax by some) about outsider artists and the definition of art itself.
  • The Impressionists
    The Impressionists
    A dramatization of the Impressionist movement as seen through the eyes of Claude Monet. Highly entertaining and informative.
  • The Impressionists: The Other French Revolution
    The Impressionists: The Other French Revolution
    A very personal and revealing look at the personalities that created Impressionism.

Entries in Early Renaissance (27)

Wednesday
Feb192014

Jacobello del Fiore

Jacobello del Fiore - Coronation of the Virgin - 1438 - Tempera on panel, 283 x 303 cm - Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice (click photo for larger image)Early Italian Renaissance painter Jacobello del Fiore (1370-1439) was a Venetian painter, who broke away from the Byzantine influenced tradition. He was influenced by the International Gothic style of the early 15th century. In this painting, Mary sits on Jesus' right, on a multi-level Gothic throne, where ee places a crown on her head. The multitude of figures restrained by the strict frames of architecture emphasize the rigid ceremoniousness of the scene--and are also quite representative of the Gothic style that preceded the Renaissance. This work is as much a delight of colors and patterns as it is a narrative. However, it does contain a lot of symbolism that does indeed tell a story and provide identifying information. For example, on the right we see patriarchs and apostles, on the left prophets and martyrs. Below saints and holy virgins are lined up; they can be recognized by the scrolls in their hands. For all of the renown of Renaissance art--it is this type of early work of that era, which remained very Gothic in style, that would have the greatest influence on later developments in Modern art.

Wednesday
Feb052014

Simone Martini - A Quintessential Sienese Painter

Simone Martini - The Annunciation and Two Saints - 1333 - Tempera on wood, 184 x 210 cm - Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence (click photo for larger image)Sienese painter Simone Martini (c. 1285-1344) was a major figure in early Italian painting, and his work exemplifies the Sienese school. Martini also greatly influenced the development of the International Gothic Style, a courtly style that synthesized a variety of characteristics from different regions. This came about because artists had to travel far and wide, to various courts of Europe, in order to find work, following the Black Death.

The altarpiece featured here was executed between 1329 and 1333 (before the outbreak of the plague) for the chapel of Sant'Ansano of the Cathedral in Siena. Simone Martini and his brother-in-law, Lippo Memmi (who completed the lateral figures of Saint Ansano and Saint Giulitta) both worked on the project. However, most of it was completed by Martini. The central pot with lilies symbolize Mary's purity, and the olive branch is a symbol of peace. The rich, lush gold background was typical for Gothic works.

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