• Identify major figures in Baroque humanities and their
works. (CO1)
Baroque Age
All non-cited images were gathered from the free domain and are not under any copyright law restrictions. All images gathered from wikipedia.org.
What is Baroque?
Generally the term “Baroque” refers to art intended to involve the audience emotionally.
The Catholic Church
supported baroque style
art during the Counter-
Reformation. The Council
of Trent decided to use
Baroque art to counter
the Protestant threat.
Baroque art was
designed to counter the
ultra-refined and highly
stylized paintings of the
Mannerist period.
Baroque Mannerist
VS.
 Work continued on St.
Peter’s Basilica, with
Carlos Maderno
heading the project.
Baroque Artists
Grandmont, Jean-Pol. Basilique Saint-Pierre-Rome (2). 2011. JPG.
When Gianlorenzo Bernini took over, he
added a colonnade to the design.
Baroque Artists
Baroque Artists
Caravaggio was a great religious painter
whose work established one of the two
major directions of painting in the Baroque
age. His works represent the emotional
and dramatic side of Baroque.
The other approach, typified by Annibale Carracci,
was more academic and intellectual rather than
emotional, with action carefully controlled.
Baroque Artists
 The Baroque era produced a new
musical form known as opera,
which is essentially a stage work
sung to the accompaniment of an
orchestra.
 One of the most prolific Baroque
composers was Antonio Vivaldi,
whose most popular work is The Four
Seasons.
Baroque and Opera
 Despite its dependency on Rome,
Baroque art thrived outside Italy. In
Holland, merchants and
tradespeople collected art by
Baroque Dutch painters such as
Pieter De Hooch, Frans Hals, Judith
Leyster, and Rembrandt van Rijn.
 All of these painters were notable
for their distinct use of lighting to
create atmosphere. Jan Vermeer
used light to inform the observer
that every object of vision has
been observed and recorded.
Baroque Artists
Peter Paul Rubens, born in Germany, established
himself as an artist in Antwerp. Known for his rich, lush
style, he earned an international reputation through
commissioned works he did for the royal courts of
Europe.
Baroque Artists
Rubens’ assistant, Anthony Van Dyck, was the
greatest portrait painter of the age.
Baroque Artists
Diego Velazquez, royal painter for Philip IV of Spain,
was linked to the Baroque artists by his feelings for
space and light.
 The reign of King Louis XIV saw Paris become increasingly the center of the Western
art world. Using his Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture, Louis defined
absolute standards by which to judge the art of the period.
 The Academy was divided by a debate about whether line or color is superior in
art. Louis XIV approved a facade for the new east wing of the Louvre which
banished all vestiges of Baroque sensuality in favor of a strict and linear classical
line. He then turned his attention to the Palace of Versailles, the seat of
government in France.
 In England, Sir Christopher Wren rebuilt St. Paul’s cathedral in 1675-1710. Late in the
Baroque age, Italian opera began to go out of style.
 German composer George Frederick Handel turned from operas to oratorios,
sacred operas sung without costume or acting. Handel’s most famous oratorio is his
Messiah
King Louis XIV
 The other great Baroque
composer was Johann
Sebastian Bach, the grand
master of the Baroque style and
composer of many
complicated fugues.
 The almost mathematical
precision of Bach’s fugues and
the keen observation
demonstrated in Vermeer’s
paintings reflect the scientific
spirit of the Baroque Age.
Johann Sebastian Bach
 Francis Bacon’s development of the principles of the scientific method, with its emphasis on
careful observation, was echoed throughout the Baroque.
 In Holland, Anton Van Leeuwenhoek developed a powerful microscope, while Galileo
Galilei was the first to develop the telescope and use it to observe the heavens.
 René Descartes did for modern philosophy what Bacon had done for science. Thomas
Hobbes developed the notion of the social contract as an alternative to anarchy, while
John Locke had more faith in people’s ability to govern themselves.
 Baroque writers displayed an uncommon interest in exploring the mysteries of love and
exploring their relationship to God.
 John Donne is considered among the finest poets of any age, while John Milton’s poems
reflected his own blend of Puritan theology and classical humanism.
Science in Baroque
 Miguel de Cervantes
wrote the greatest of
all picaresque novels,
Don Quixote, which,
for the first time in
Western literature,
explored the conflict
between reality and
the imagination.
Don Quixote
References
Grandmont, Jean-Pol. Basilique Saint-Pierre-Rome (2). 2011. JPG.
All non-cited images were gathered from the free domain and are not under any copyright
law restrictions. All images gathered from wikipedia.org.

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Chapter 10 Lecture

  • 1. • Identify major figures in Baroque humanities and their works. (CO1) Baroque Age All non-cited images were gathered from the free domain and are not under any copyright law restrictions. All images gathered from wikipedia.org.
  • 2. What is Baroque? Generally the term “Baroque” refers to art intended to involve the audience emotionally. The Catholic Church supported baroque style art during the Counter- Reformation. The Council of Trent decided to use Baroque art to counter the Protestant threat. Baroque art was designed to counter the ultra-refined and highly stylized paintings of the Mannerist period. Baroque Mannerist VS.
  • 3.  Work continued on St. Peter’s Basilica, with Carlos Maderno heading the project. Baroque Artists Grandmont, Jean-Pol. Basilique Saint-Pierre-Rome (2). 2011. JPG.
  • 4. When Gianlorenzo Bernini took over, he added a colonnade to the design. Baroque Artists
  • 5. Baroque Artists Caravaggio was a great religious painter whose work established one of the two major directions of painting in the Baroque age. His works represent the emotional and dramatic side of Baroque.
  • 6. The other approach, typified by Annibale Carracci, was more academic and intellectual rather than emotional, with action carefully controlled. Baroque Artists
  • 7.  The Baroque era produced a new musical form known as opera, which is essentially a stage work sung to the accompaniment of an orchestra.  One of the most prolific Baroque composers was Antonio Vivaldi, whose most popular work is The Four Seasons. Baroque and Opera
  • 8.  Despite its dependency on Rome, Baroque art thrived outside Italy. In Holland, merchants and tradespeople collected art by Baroque Dutch painters such as Pieter De Hooch, Frans Hals, Judith Leyster, and Rembrandt van Rijn.  All of these painters were notable for their distinct use of lighting to create atmosphere. Jan Vermeer used light to inform the observer that every object of vision has been observed and recorded. Baroque Artists
  • 9. Peter Paul Rubens, born in Germany, established himself as an artist in Antwerp. Known for his rich, lush style, he earned an international reputation through commissioned works he did for the royal courts of Europe.
  • 10. Baroque Artists Rubens’ assistant, Anthony Van Dyck, was the greatest portrait painter of the age.
  • 11. Baroque Artists Diego Velazquez, royal painter for Philip IV of Spain, was linked to the Baroque artists by his feelings for space and light.
  • 12.  The reign of King Louis XIV saw Paris become increasingly the center of the Western art world. Using his Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture, Louis defined absolute standards by which to judge the art of the period.  The Academy was divided by a debate about whether line or color is superior in art. Louis XIV approved a facade for the new east wing of the Louvre which banished all vestiges of Baroque sensuality in favor of a strict and linear classical line. He then turned his attention to the Palace of Versailles, the seat of government in France.  In England, Sir Christopher Wren rebuilt St. Paul’s cathedral in 1675-1710. Late in the Baroque age, Italian opera began to go out of style.  German composer George Frederick Handel turned from operas to oratorios, sacred operas sung without costume or acting. Handel’s most famous oratorio is his Messiah King Louis XIV
  • 13.  The other great Baroque composer was Johann Sebastian Bach, the grand master of the Baroque style and composer of many complicated fugues.  The almost mathematical precision of Bach’s fugues and the keen observation demonstrated in Vermeer’s paintings reflect the scientific spirit of the Baroque Age. Johann Sebastian Bach
  • 14.  Francis Bacon’s development of the principles of the scientific method, with its emphasis on careful observation, was echoed throughout the Baroque.  In Holland, Anton Van Leeuwenhoek developed a powerful microscope, while Galileo Galilei was the first to develop the telescope and use it to observe the heavens.  René Descartes did for modern philosophy what Bacon had done for science. Thomas Hobbes developed the notion of the social contract as an alternative to anarchy, while John Locke had more faith in people’s ability to govern themselves.  Baroque writers displayed an uncommon interest in exploring the mysteries of love and exploring their relationship to God.  John Donne is considered among the finest poets of any age, while John Milton’s poems reflected his own blend of Puritan theology and classical humanism. Science in Baroque
  • 15.  Miguel de Cervantes wrote the greatest of all picaresque novels, Don Quixote, which, for the first time in Western literature, explored the conflict between reality and the imagination. Don Quixote
  • 16. References Grandmont, Jean-Pol. Basilique Saint-Pierre-Rome (2). 2011. JPG. All non-cited images were gathered from the free domain and are not under any copyright law restrictions. All images gathered from wikipedia.org.