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Page 1: Baroque 1600-1750

Baroque 1600-1750

• Marrying grand scale and advanced techniques of Renaissance and the emotion, intensity, and drama of Mannerism

• Baroque artist built upon Renaissance ideas• Sensitivity and mastery of light key elements

– Used to achieve emotional impact

• Began in Rome– Catholic faith’s triumph after Counter Reformation – Also to attract new followers

• Theatricality and movement

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Italian Baroque

• Emphasis on emotion rather than rationality– Caravaggio 1571-1610– Bernini 1598-1610– Borromini 1599-1667

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Caravaggio (1571-1610)

• Individuals painted as “down and dirty” – Secularized religious art

• Saints and miracles painted as ordinary things

• Specialized in religious art – Created images from nature

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Caravaggio The Conversion of St.Paul (1601)

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CaravaggioThe Calling of St. Matthew (1599-1600)

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Caravaggio Supper at Emmaus (1601)

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CaravaggioJudith Beheading Holofernes (1598-99)

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Artemisia Gentileschi (1593-1653)Judith and Maidservant with the Head of

Holofernes (1593)

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Bernini (1598-1610)

• Sculptor, architect, painter, playwright, composer, and theater designer.

• Wrote comedies and Operas when he was not carving

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Bernini

David(1623-24)

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David

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BerniniThe Ecstasy

of St. Theresa (1645-52)

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Borromini (1599-1667)

• Did for architecture what Caravaggio did to painting.

• Rebellious, emotionally disturbed – died from suicide

• Worked under Bernini as a stonecutter

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BorrominiSan Carlo alle Quattro Fontane

(1665-67)

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BorrominiSt. Ivo Dome

(1642-60)

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Flemish Baroque

• Rubens (1577-1640)

• Van Dyck (1599-1641)

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Sir Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640)

• His was both a painter and a diplomat

• Worldly success and personal happiness– outgoing, educated, handsome, well traveled,

spoke 6 languages

• Produced over 2,000 paintings

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RubensThe Descent

from the Cross1612

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Rubens

The Three Graces

1636-38

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RubensMarie Arrives at Marseilles

1622-25

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Rubens Loyola and

Catholic Reform 1619

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Sir Anthony Van Dyck (1599-1641)

• Child prodigy accomplished painter at 16

• Court painter to Charles I

• loved high society

– strutted around with a sword

– dressed ostentatiously

– adopted sunflower as personal symbol

• Staged aristocrats in settings with Classical columns

• changed the head to body ratio to 1-7 instead of 1-6

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Van Dyck

Charles I at the Hunt

1635

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Dutch Baroque

• Heda

• Ruisdael

• Hals

• Rembrandt

• Vermeer

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HedaStill Life with Guilt Goblet 1635

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Jacob van RuisdaelWindmill at Wijk-bij-Duurstede

1665

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Frans Hals

The Jolly Toper 1627

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Hals The Laughing Cavalier 1624

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HalsSaint George Guard Company

1627

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Rembrandtvan Rijn

Self-Portrait1629-30

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Rembrandt

Self-Portrait1660

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RembrandtThe Nightwatch 1642

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Johannes Vermeer

The Kitchenmaid

1658

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English Baroque

• Period of upheaval in England – Charles I beheaded– Oliver Cromwell destroyed church art– Parliament seized power– Religious art not allowed in Protestant states– Mythological subjects never caught on

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William Hogarth Marriage a la Mode “Breakfast

Scene” 1745

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HogarthMarriage a la Mode “The Lady’s

Death”1743-45

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Hogarth The Rake’s Progress The Levee

1732-33

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Gainsborough

Mrs. Richard Brinsley Sheridan

1785

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GainsboroughMrs. Siddons

1785

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Reynolds

Mrs. Siddons as the Tragic

Muse1783

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ReynoldsJane,

Countess of Harrington

1777

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Sir Christopher Wren St. Paul’s Cathegral, West facade

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Spanish Baroque 599-1660

• Velazquez 1599-1660– 18 a master painter– Only painter for Philip IV– Precursor to Impressionism– Simplicity and earthy

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Diego Velazquez

Las Meninas

1656

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VelazquezPope Innocent X 1650

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French Baroque

• La Tour

• Poussin 1594-1665

• Claude 1600-82

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La Tour

The Penitent Magdalen 1638-43

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Nicolas PoissinBurial of Phocion 1648

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Claude Lorrain Landscape with Aeneas at Delos

1672

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Le Brun and Hardouin-MansartHall of Mirrors 1680

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Le NotreParterre du Midi 1669-85