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Dome, Cathedral, Florence. 1420-1436; lantern completed 1471
Early Ren. in Italy
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Filippo Brunelleschi turned to Pantheon in Rome for inspiration and guidance
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unfinished - not sure why
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Latin - Cross ground plan
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Basilica - nave is higher than side isles; campanille - belltower
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He invented a new kind of dome and a new way of building one: architects normally used centering; too big & expensive, no beams long enough for this huge dome
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competition for architects; Brunelleschi used scaffolding and cranes
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normal dome was solid; Brunelleschi came up w/ idea of ribs - some visible, some not, cage like dome, used diff. kinds of stones so it was higher and wouldn't crush the walls
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smaller semi-circular domes on outside are more reinforcement
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Santo Spirito, Florence. Begun 1446
Early Ren. in Italy
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entryway: was going to have 4 entrances; normally 3 (Father, Son & Holy Spirit)
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studied gothic architecture and incorporated it into his architecture
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Brunelleschi - used flat ceilings to give sense of height
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it's modular - has good proportion and opposite for Gothic no tusing it well
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believed in universal harmony - can be expressed in many ways (math, music, proportion)
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8 exposed ribs
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Palazzo Medici-Riccardi, Florence, begun 1445
Early Ren. in Italy
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Architect: Michelozzo; was a follower of Brunelleschi
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extended in the 18th century
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Arches were open in 15th century, filled in 16th
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3 stories - typical of gothic and renaissance; Lower - business was done here, storage; 2nd - where main family lived; 3rd - servants or strangly family members
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courtyard in center
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Rustication: rough stones or blocks (bottom)
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Ashlar: smooth stones or blocks (top)
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encrustation; rounded arches
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Michelozzo didn't understand proportion as well, except in courtyard
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Palazzo Rucellai, Florence. ca. 1452-1470
Early Ren. in Italy
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Architect: Leon Battista Alberti
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not built from ground, pre-existing rooms
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3 stories; encrustation not finished; 3: corinthian, 2: ionic, 1: doric
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exterior: flat shapes = pilaster (pillar looking thing) for support
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lookds back at the Roman Colosseum
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Rounded arch on windows flanked by pilasters
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Four Crowned Martyrs. Orsanmichele, Florence. ca. 1410-1416
Early Ren in Italy
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Architect: Nanni di Banco
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put to death for refusing to follow ?
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Lookds back to ancient sculptures, more naturalistic, proportion
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St. Mark. Orsanmichele, Florence. ca. 1411-1413
Early Ren. in Italy
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filled niche with St. Mark, sontrapposto (weight, pose)
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use naturalism - veins in hand, way cloth falls, illusion that we're looking at something with human presence
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use proportion - everything measure by head, observed proportion at a 45 degree angle
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David. bronze. ca. 1440-1460
Early Ren. in Italy
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Donatello is responsible for the 1st nude sculpture since antiquity
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David vs. Goliath; standing on giant's head
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feminity/weakness - God was working through him; doesn't look like a soldier or someone that could successfully fight
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Isaac and His Sons East doors, Baptistery, Florence. 1425-52
Early Ren. in Italy
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Architect: Lorenzo Ghiberti
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Rebecca on right: out of place
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3 scenes - kids being born, Isaac telling them to hunt and them getting baptized
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made the people in higher relief because they're up front
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architecture is a little too big
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1 point perspective
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Lamentation. fresco, Scrovegni (or Arena) Chapel, Padua. 1305-6
Proto Ren.
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Architect: Giotto di Bondone (1267-1337) (Proto-Renaissance)
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family chapel, privately funded
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scenes from lives of Christ, Mary, and crucifiction
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expensive blue paint
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Enrique Scrovegni - patron to chapel
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scene from wall - Lamentation - Jesus died, used landscape with rock/tree pointing towards Jesus' head
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Tribute Money. fresco. Brancacci Chapel, S. M. del Carmine, Florence, ca. 1427
Early REn. in Italy
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Architect: Masaccio
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continuous narration; Jesus asks Peter to get coin from fish's mouth, pays off tax man; Peter is shown 3 times
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1 point perspective and atmospheric perspective
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Masaccio noticed light and shadow and found a way to imitate it; illusion of 3D
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in family chapel; may have been a statement that taxpayers are wrong
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Holy Trinity. fresco. Sta. Maria Novella, Florence. ca. 1428 by Masaccio
Early Ren. in Italy
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Patrons in the pic (paid for the painting); private fam. chapel
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momento mori: "I was what you are, you will be what I am" - writing at bottom, skeleton of Adam
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crucifiction; St. John, Virgin Mary, Father, Son and Holy Ghost (dove aroung God's neck)
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one point perspective, vanishing point, orthogonals: diagonal lines that project from the edges of the picture to the vanishing point
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symbolic path of salvation: bottom: tomb; Middle: live people at eye level; top: Jesus and Holy Trinity
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Merode Altarpiece (Annunciation) ca. 1425-1428. Robert Campin (Master of Flemalle)
Early Ren. in Northern Europe
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Left wing: donors/patrons kneeling in garden; enclosed garden - virgin's purity; gate open let donors in; on ground
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Center: Annunciation; white lilies and cleaning hands w/ water rep. purity; candle - Jesus; window and sun rays - signs of light; descending upon Virgin Mary; look out back window into heavens, rep divinity
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Right wing: Joseph making a mousetrap - ref St. Augustine of Hippo wrote "The cross of the Lord was the devil's mousetrap, that bait by which he was"; in middle story - see cityscape out window
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perspective isn't systematically organized
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tripytch (3 wings)
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Man in a Red Turban. 21 October 1433. Jan van Eyck.
Early ren. in northern europe
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headdress - chaperon, not turban
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self portrait?
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frame - often carry enscription; Bottom: "Jan van Eyck made me" (like the figure is speaking to the viewers); Top: "Als ich kan"/"As I can, but not as I would" (you want to do something ambitious, but you can't so you do what you can
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Giovanni Arnolfini (?) and his wife, Jeanna Cenami (?). 1434. Jan van Eyck
early ren. in northern europe
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great detail to light and shadow
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oil medium is how he can create such detail like the dogs hair; gives it warmth and illuminosity
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marraige arrangement, could be the wedding, could be record of marraige
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mirror in the background w/ "Jan van Eyck was here" above it; looks like a legal signature, this could be marraige certificate
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little circle around mirrors - through God's eyes
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in mirror - can see 2 extra people (1 is Jan van Eyck), prayer beads hanging
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dogs mean fidelity
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people are standing upright, stiff w/ no emotion on face
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Deposition. ca. 1435. Rogier van der Weyden
early ren. in northern europe
- great deal of movement; realistic, dynamic and emotional composition
- Virgin's face - can see anguish on her face; witnessed her son's death; she fainted
- another Mary has cloth to her face with tear running down her face, grief stricken
- oil paint - great details in clothing, etc.
- backgroung - not realistic
- lowering body into enclosed metallic space makes viewers emotion more powerful; symbolic of lowered from cross to tomb
- Mary fainted, we know she'll become conscious again; parallels resurrection; similar posture w/ Jesus, eyes closed
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St. Anthony of Egypt Tormented by Demons (engraving) ca. 1480-1490. by Martin Schongauer
early ren. in northern europe
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Melun Diptych ca. 1450-1451 by Jean Fouquet
early ren. in northern europe
Portrait of Etienne Chevalier (w/ St. Stephen) 1450
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patrons who worked for the French king and St. Stephen carrying book w/ stone on top - attribute (he was stoned to death, wound in head w/ blood coming out)
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in a church; architecture reminds of Alberti/Italian Ren.
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flemish details on stone and face; oil painting
Virgin and Child (Agnes Sorel?) ca. 1451
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Last Supper. Fresco. Sta. Maria delle Grazie, Milan. 1495-1498 by Leonardo da Vinci
high ren. in Italy
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cut a doorway into the room then covered it
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in bad shape, Leo liked to experiment with paint, feet would've been quite visible
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12 desicples w/ Jesus - Leo. placed Judas w/ the others, but he's the only one in shadow; usually on the other side of the table bcs he betrayed Jesus for 20 silver pieces; bag of silver in pic
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1 pt. perspective - not continuous, have to look up into the painting; appears to be an ideal realm that rises above naturalism (transcendance)
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split into roughly 3 shapes connected by movement
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expresses emotion of figures - gestures; decorum - appropriate to age
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Judas reaching for bread - Jesus' body
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sky/heavens (trinity, 3 windows) - act as Jesus' halo
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Tempietto. San Pietro in Montorio, Rome. 1502 by
Donato Bramante
high ren. in italy
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memorial marker; some Christians believe St. Peter was crucified here
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in a courtyard
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proportions/forms - borrowed from ancient architecture
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implied cylinder movement - doesn't seem as stable or steady; rectangle and squares = stability; steps seem to flow down
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David. 1501-1504 by Michelangelo
high ren. in italy
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Michelangelo was commissioned to carve David
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it never reached the cathedral; it's copy is in front of Palazzo, real one is 13 ft. high and in a school
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David was an emblem of Florence
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pictorial sculpture - meant to be seen from the front
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brow is apprehensive
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perfectly proportioned - no blemishes, perfect anatomy, beauty - shows divinity/God's strength
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hand is big bcs thought it was going on top of church
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Sistine Chapel Ceiling. Fresco. Vatican, Rome. 1508-1512 by Michelangelo
high ren. in italy
Creation of Adam and Fall of Mankind and Expulsion from Eden
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Michelangelo thought he was primarily a sculptor
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ceiling was originally blue w/ dots - rep. stars
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Pope Sixtus 4th asked him to paint the ceiling
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Mich. wasn't the first to paint here
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fresco painting at the bottom, middle: ?, portaits of Popes at top
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Battle of Ten Naked Men. (engraving) ca. 1465 by Pollaiuolo
early ren. in italy
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no clear subject but portrays masculine violence
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gerat deal of attention to anatomy and human figure - may have been created to teach other artists how to paint figures
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engraving: using burins to cut into copper plate, then you fill the plate w/ ink, put it through the press and the press pulls the ink out of the plate onto the paper. invented by Germans
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parallel hatching
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all muscles are flexed
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2 guys in center are mirrored images
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Hercules and Anteus. ca. 1475 by Pollaiuolo
early ren. in italy
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Anteus' mother was earth goddess
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Anteus can't be overcome by anyone whiile his feet are on the ground - Hercules has to pick him up to complete his task
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focus on muscles/anatomy
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commissioned by Medici family - associating themselves w/ Florence - Hercules was on city seal
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Birth of Venus. ca. 1482 by Sandro Botticelli
early ren. in italy
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Venus stands in shell, blown along by wind god - Zephyr, who is embracing Flora - goddess of flowers; mythology
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spring is welcoming Venus ashore
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Figures are stretched out, not as strong of an understanding of anatomy
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no perspective
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focuses on beauty, right shoulder is misformed and elongated body but from a distance it looks beautiful
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classical reference to Venus de Medici
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Gonzaga Family. Frescoes. Camera Picta, Ducal Palace, Mantua. 1474 by Andrea Mantegna
early ren. in italy
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first place to have a room where 1 pt. perspective works in all parts of the room
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had oculu on ceiling - looks like an opening - painted window
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theme of room is procreation, celebration of the Gonzaga fam.
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Anteros - in the oculus being crowned, symbolizes desire and married love
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medalions w/ portraits of Roman emporers; wouldn't have happpened in Republican Florence but it's ok in Mantua
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illusionism - ceiling looks vaulted - only painted that way
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ceiling - Anteros is the married cupid, peacock - Goddess Juno - marriage; pot is about to fall on your face
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Donatello. Feast of Herod (relief sculpture). ca. 1423-1427
early ren. in italy
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