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Jean Pucelle. Book of Hours- Kiss of Judas and the Annunciation.
Used a technique of grey to greatly distinguish things in the images. Bodies are purposely and symbolically curved like S’s
in the Gothic style- gothic architechture,
French culture. Made in paris.
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Ambrogio Lorenzetti. Effects of Good Government in the City
This piece shows a lot of linear perspective and is very busy. Painted by Italian artist. The south wall contained the only window in the room the painting was in.
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Duccio di Buoninsegna. Raising of Lazarus
Altarpiece. This piece is very linear with elongated figures. Mary Magdalen is pictured by Christ’s feet as a reminder of the washing of his feet with hair. Lazarus’s face is painted green symbolling death as another figure covers his nose around Lazarus.
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Giotto di Bondone. Marriage at Cana, Raising of Lazarus, Lamentation, and Resurrection
this painting was done all in fresco. The narrative began on the south wall and worked its way to the west wall
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Pol, Herman, and Jean Limbourg. February, Très Riches Heures of Jean
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Workshop of the Master of Flémalle. Mérodealtarpiece (Triptych of the Annunciation)
This piece is a Flemish iconography/picture writing , triptych, altarpiece. The pages of the book, on the table in the middle section, are fluttering/moving to show that the angel just entered the room. Mary not looking at the angel also shows the idea of the angel just entering at the moment. Mary holds the bible with white clothe to show how precious and important it is to her as she does not want to soil the bible with her fingertips. |
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Jan van Eyck. Double Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife
The dog in this painting is a symbol of fidelity and is not reflected in the mirror, showing that it has symbolic meaning. Another symbol is only one candle being lit in the chandelier. |
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Rogier van der Weyden. Deposition.
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Filippo Brunelleschi. Sacrifice of Isaac
This piece used more bronze than Lorenzo Ghiberti’s piece did, therefore was not chosen |
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Lorenzo Ghiberti. Sacrifice of Isaac
This piece was selected because it used less bronze. This piece also marks the beginning of the renaissance and shows change in task. |
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Filippo Brunelleschi. Dome of Florence Cathedral
This dome was built with an outside wall and an inside wall while the workers were in-between the two layers. |
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Donatello. David.
First free standing life size nude sculpture since antiquity. |
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Donatello. Equestrian Monument of Erasmo da Narni
The statue is life-size and follows a theme of both individualism and humanism. |
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Masaccio. Trinity with the Virgin, St. John the Evangelist, and Donors
There is a major use of vanishing point for perspective. Mary, on the left, points at Christ to show he is the focus point of the image. The inscription on the tomb reads “what you are, I once was. What I once was, you will become” as it is a momentomori discussing how he was once alive and is now dead, as humans are alive but will be dead. |
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Fra Angelico. Annunciation
More Italian than art Flemish because of the arches in the architecture and the muted colors. |
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Sandro Botticelli. Birth of Venus
Venus is the Greek goddess of love and beauty, but here she is seen as a corollary for Mary as she covers herself to be chaste and modest. |
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Andrea Mantegna. View of the Camera Picta
The first of illusionary ceilings as foreshortening is used by making objects seem to recede into space by getting shorter |
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Giovanni Bellini. St. Francis in Ecstasy
The skull in the image is used as a reminder of his mortality and the animals signify St. Francis’s ability to communicate with animals. |
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Leonardo da Vinci. Mona Lisa
the way the woman is pointed is significant. leonardo uses sfumat style which makes the art look a little smokey. |
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Leonardo da Vinci. The Last Supper
this painting is a mural, in a place that was common for "last supers" in a dining/refectory hall. while monks ate they could look at the painting. jesus resembles a shape of a triangle signifying a triangle for the trinity and the most stabel pose. Judus is the only figure in shadow and is clutching his sack, narrating the story in the bible. |
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Raphael. The Madonna of the Goldfinch
Raphael used rich colors. he did a lot of similar pieces. he paints the situation with mother and child and the bodies very realistic.
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Raphael. Philosophy or The School of Athens
was where the pope had meetings with councils. has representations of different levels of the four most important areas of learning like philosophy and law. Sacratice points up as Aristotle points to the ground as he belives knowledge comes from experience.
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Michelangelo. David.
seventeen feet tall, large naked sculpture. this david is different as he is not dipicted as a little boy in this sculpture, but instead manly and muscular like in his early 20's. this was done after medici was expeled from florence. David's facial expression is worried or scared.
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Michelangelo. Creation of Adam
this shows the creation of man by reniassance thinking adn humanism. this picture dipicts the creation of man as the man being the chosen of God and God's highest creation. Michelangelo thought that as he creates art with his God given talent. it resembles God in himself as he created human. This image draws the attention of the ceiling as it has the most empty space.
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Giorgione or Titian. Pastoral Concert
this piece has the name pastoral as it is in the sheep feild. the naked women go unoticed as they are allegories, and not really there. the women are representations of muses, and provide inspiration as one dips into the well of inspiration.
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Titian. Pesaro Madonna
the architecture is infront of the paiting. members of the pesaro family are shown. the family is gathered at the foot of the throne. saint frances looks into the face of the baby jesus. jesus kicks saint francis and pulls at the vail emphasizing his humanity and how he lived a human experience. this piece is meant to be looked at from above as the higher figures are further back.
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Jean antonie Watteau. Pilgrimage to the island of Cythera, French, 1700’s.
the goddess of love and beauty is shown in the plant statue as it shows enclosed fantasy and as the people are young couples. |
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Jules Hardouin-Mansart , French, 1600’s.
rococo because it is busily decorated |
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Hyacinthe Rigaud. Louis XIV 1700’s French.
Extravagant clothes and royal blue show royalty. Called himself the sun king like the sun, he was the center of the universe lower perspective |
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Johannes Vermeer. Woman Holding a Balance. 1664. dutch
The art behind her shows the judgement day as she weighs her jewels, meant to remind the viewer of earthly things that wont last past judgement day |
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Judith Leyster self portrait 1600’s. dutch
paints herself as an artist but subltley shows her riches and that shes an aristocrat by the way she has painted herself dressed with the big fancy collar with lace detaill. |
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Rembrandt van rijn, the company of Captian frans. 1600. dutch.
This piece was done in dry point of a group of men gathered. Tenebrism is used to bring the figures forward in the light and look three dimensional like they are walkin out toward the viewer |
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Anthony van Dyck. Charles I at the Hunt. 1635. flemish
the mans clothes look expensive to show his wealth. tenebrism is used by how the man stands in a spotlight and background figures are darker. The man has a sword for fencing rather than defense of himself. Natural landscape so that he may look more natural being king. |
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Peter Paul Rubens. Henry IV Receiving the Portrait of Marie de' Medici. 1600’s. Flemish.
out of a series of 21 paintings he did to glorify the life of marie. Person of france dressed as goddess Athena is whispering in his ear. |
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Diego Velázquez. Las Meninas, 1600’s. spanish.
baroque painting. Central focus on couple's five year old daughter the infanta, Margarita. The viewer cant see what is on the canvas turned away. Looks as if the image were painted in a mirror. |
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Artemisia Gentileschi. Judith and her Maidservant with the Head 1600’s. Italian
The contrast and light makes the figures and painting more dramatic. The women's faces are brighter making them look nervous but they are depicted as heroins. |
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Caravaggio. The Calling of St. Matthew, 1600. Italian
baroque art. Shows when Matthew is called on to be Christ's apostle. Tenebrism is used by the light coming from the right pointing directly at Mathew. |
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Giovanni Battista Gaulli. the Triumph of the Name of Jesus and the Fall of the Damned. 1600’s. itallian.
Baroque cealings with illusions. Focuses on the last judgement |
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Gianlorenzo Bernini. David. 1600’s italain.
He did this with full awareness of the past davids and did his in full acton instead of either before or after, made david look older. Face looks fierce |
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Gianlorenzo Bernini. St. Teresa of Ávila in Ecstasy. 1600’s. Italian.
shows a visionary nun. Her head is rolled back is significant as her hair did too |
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El Greco. burial of count orgaz, 1500’s. greek.
focuses on roman catholic idea that you have to do good works to have salvation. That saints are intercessors of heaven. |
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Pieter Bruegel the Elder. Return of the Hunters, 1500’s dutch.
Painting from series of seven calendar painting type pictures. Dogs and hunters are bent over to show that they are tired and have nothing from the hunt. |
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Hieronymus Bosch. Garden of Earthly Delights , 1500’s. dutch.
full of bizarre creatures and actions. Vision of pre fall of eden in early stages of earth. The top right section represents hell with demons and tortures. The tree man is bosh’s self portrait. |
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Hans Holbein the Younger, The French Ambassadors. 1500’s , german.
Skull on the bottom is a momentum mori as a reminder of death and painted disorted so that it can only be clearly seen with a view point from the right. |
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Albrecht Dürer. Adam and Eve. 1500s. roman.
Has great detail and variety of textures. |
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!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Matthias Grünewald. Isenheim altarpiece. 1500 |
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Sofonisba Anguissola. Self-Portrait 1500’s Italian.
Hand is obscuring word virago which means purity and virginity. Shows that her virtue is still good even though she is working for money and she would only do art for money |
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Andrea Palladio. Exterior view of the Villa Rotonda. 1560. italian
thomas jefferson coppied his house from this |
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Titan. venus. 1500’s . Itallian
alluding to greek roman goddess of love and beauty. Workers in the back dig for her clothes. Flowers symbolize fertitly. |
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Marie-Louise-Élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun. Portrait of Marie Antoinette with Her Children. 1787. french.
the black cradle/basket symbolizes the death of one of her babies. |
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Angelica Kauffmann. Cornelia Pointing to Her Children as Her Treasures. c. 1785. Swiss
the way the lady in the white gestures her hand is showing how she is showing/thinking of her children as her treasures while the other lady hold her jewelry out to show as her treasure. |
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William Hogarth, the marriage contract. 1700’s. English/brittish.
This piece shows dogs chained together representing unwanted marriage. The daughter in this picture looks bored or unhappy |
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Jean Honore Fragonard. The swing. 1700’s, French.
This piece is meant to show playfulness with the swing which can be associated with rococo. Rococo is also shown by the cupid with its finger by its mouth symbolizing eroticness. The man on the ground looks up her dress and another man pushes her on the swing representing the receiving of goods from the church. |
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Pablo Picasso. Les Demoiselles d'Avignon. 1907. spanish
picassos response to the joy of life by matise. left girl is prehistoric ancient asteria mask. |
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Henri Matisse. Le Bonheur de Vivre (The Joy of Life). 1905. French
meant to be childlike. meant to be paradise pre civilized. acheives innocence in art |
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Auguste Rodin. Burghers of Calais. 1884. french.
he was concerned with expressing human lived experience by showing each figure reacting differently to the knowing of their doom. less visually descriptive but more expressive. |
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Mary Cassatt. Woman Bathing. 1890.American
one of only four women in impressionism group. done after japenese art. |
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Édouard Manet. Olympia. 1863. french
known as father of impressionism. woman is meant to be a prostitute. |
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Claude Monet. Impression, Sunrise. 1872. French.
this painting gave name to the impressionism group. the intranjant ones is what they were called. |
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Pierre-Auguste Renoir. Moulin de la Galette. 1876.french.
the women are dressed to show they work in shops |
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Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres. Large Odalisque. 1814
conditioned by napoleons sister for her husband. |
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Thomas Jefferson. Monticello. 1769
also did virgina state capital building neoclassical architecture. federal style architecture. inspired by vila rotunda |
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Théodore Géricault. The Raft of the "Medusa." 1818. french
done during restoration of monarchy. depicted the moment when they see a ship on the horizon. |
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John Constable. The White Horse. 1819. British
smoke in the right top is signifying factories that were being built, the rural areas as the one depicted are vanishing as places become urban |
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Thomas Cole. The Oxbow. 1836. american
left side is the wilderneess as the tree on the eft side was blasted with lightening meaning nature can take away anything -> idea of sublime and presence of God in Nature. |
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Caspar David Friedrich. Abbey in an Oak Forest. 1809 german.
gothic style. ruins of a monastery . the dead trees will later regrow symbolizing that germany will regrow |
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Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre. The Artist's Studio. 1837 french.
camera was invented around this time. still objects because they were easier to photograph |
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Alexander Gardner. The Home of the Rebel Sharpshooter: Battle Field at Gettysburg. 1863. american
battlefield shop. mans gun is propped up showing that the photographers moved the body and the gun to make the picture more dramatic |
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Gustave Courbet. A Burial at Ornans. 1849. French
shows no reference to who died.the workers are in the foreground. all bland, no extreme subject or topic, just depicting every day middle class people to show that no subject is unworthy to be painted. |
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Jean-François Millet. The Gleaners. 1857. french
gleaning means picking up leftover bits after harvest. painted because of arguments on gleamers rights. sympathetic to hardwork of peasants. |
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Vincent van Gogh. The Starry Night. 1889.dutch |
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Edvard Munch. The Scream. 1910 |
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Paul Cézanne. Mont Sainte-Victoire. 1885. french |
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Georges Seurat. A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte. 1884 french |
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