• Identify major figures in Renaissance and Mannerism
(Italy) humanities and their works. (CO1)
Renaissance and Mannerism in Italy
All non-cited images were gathered from the free domain and are not under any copyright law restrictions. All images gathered from wikipedia.org.
Giovanni di Bicci de’ Medici,
founder of the Medici bank.
 The Early Renaissance, which occurred
during the fifteenth century, was a time
when old ideas were challenged and new
ideas began to take hold. One reason for
this upheaval was the spread of the
bubonic plague, which undermined
traditional belief systems and spawned
widespread social unrest and turmoil.
 The Medici family, led by Giovanni de’
Medici and his son Cosimo, along with
Cosimo’s grandson, Lorenzo, made
Florence the cultural center of
Renaissance Europe through their
financial support of the arts. The Medici’s
were humanists, believing in the worth
and dignity of the individual, and valuing
the cultures of ancient Greece and Rome,
and especially the works of Plato.
Individual genius, which was viewed as the
worldly manifestation of divine truth, was
allowed to flourish during Renaissance Italy as
never before in Western culture.
Sculptors such as Alberti
and Donatello used
linear perspective in
organizing their
compositions.
Individual Genius
Renaissance architects
such as Brunelleschi and
Alberti demonstrated a
renewed interest in
ancient Roman models,
with their mathematically
determined proportions
and emphasis on
orderliness, clarity, and
logic of construction.
Individual Genius
Frank, K. View of the Duomo's Dome,
Florence. 2008. JPEG.
Zacchi, Anna. Sant Andrea Straight. 2006. JPG.
Renaissance artists such
as Masaccio and Piero
emphasized the art of
perspective, the
principles of which had
been little used since
ancient Roman times.
Individual Genius
Music in the Renaissance
 The greatest influence on early
Renaissance music was Guillaume
Dufay, who wrote many motets,
compositions that set a sacred text to
polyphonic choral music. One factor
that led to the popularity of music
during this period was the rise of music
printing.
 The most famous writer of this period
was Petrarch. His sonnets introduced
one of the predominant themes of the
Renaissance lyric poetry: the expression
of the speaker’s love for a woman, and
the complexity of love.
 Florence’s domination of Italian culture
ended in 1494 when Dominican friar
Girolamo Savonarola took control of the
city.
 One famous artist of the
High Renaissance was
Leonardo da Vinci,
painter of The Last
Supper and Mona Lisa.
He did not share the
Florentine taste for
classical humanist
scholarship.
Leonardo da Vinci
 Pope Nicholas V helped a
reborn Rome replace
Florence as the cultural
center of the Renaissance,
Raphael, considered the
epitome of High
Renaissance painters,
became particularly famous
for his paintings of the
Madonna.
 Although Michelangelo
considered himself a
sculptor, he was compelled
by Pope Julius II to paint the
ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.
Popes and Great Artists
 The musical composer
most closely identified with
the High Renaissance is
Josquin Des Pres,
composer and director of
the Sistine Choir.
 Two famous writers of the
period were Castiglione,
who supported the tenets
of Renaissance humanism,
and Machiavelli, who
challenged those tenets.
Music and Writing
Resources
Frank, K. View of the Duomo's Dome, Florence. 2008. JPEG.
Zacchi, Anna. Sant Andrea Straight. 2006. 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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Chapters 8 and 9 Lecture - Humanities

  • 1. • Identify major figures in Renaissance and Mannerism (Italy) humanities and their works. (CO1) Renaissance and Mannerism in Italy 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. Giovanni di Bicci de’ Medici, founder of the Medici bank.  The Early Renaissance, which occurred during the fifteenth century, was a time when old ideas were challenged and new ideas began to take hold. One reason for this upheaval was the spread of the bubonic plague, which undermined traditional belief systems and spawned widespread social unrest and turmoil.  The Medici family, led by Giovanni de’ Medici and his son Cosimo, along with Cosimo’s grandson, Lorenzo, made Florence the cultural center of Renaissance Europe through their financial support of the arts. The Medici’s were humanists, believing in the worth and dignity of the individual, and valuing the cultures of ancient Greece and Rome, and especially the works of Plato.
  • 3. Individual genius, which was viewed as the worldly manifestation of divine truth, was allowed to flourish during Renaissance Italy as never before in Western culture. Sculptors such as Alberti and Donatello used linear perspective in organizing their compositions. Individual Genius
  • 4. Renaissance architects such as Brunelleschi and Alberti demonstrated a renewed interest in ancient Roman models, with their mathematically determined proportions and emphasis on orderliness, clarity, and logic of construction. Individual Genius Frank, K. View of the Duomo's Dome, Florence. 2008. JPEG. Zacchi, Anna. Sant Andrea Straight. 2006. JPG.
  • 5. Renaissance artists such as Masaccio and Piero emphasized the art of perspective, the principles of which had been little used since ancient Roman times. Individual Genius
  • 6. Music in the Renaissance  The greatest influence on early Renaissance music was Guillaume Dufay, who wrote many motets, compositions that set a sacred text to polyphonic choral music. One factor that led to the popularity of music during this period was the rise of music printing.  The most famous writer of this period was Petrarch. His sonnets introduced one of the predominant themes of the Renaissance lyric poetry: the expression of the speaker’s love for a woman, and the complexity of love.  Florence’s domination of Italian culture ended in 1494 when Dominican friar Girolamo Savonarola took control of the city.
  • 7.  One famous artist of the High Renaissance was Leonardo da Vinci, painter of The Last Supper and Mona Lisa. He did not share the Florentine taste for classical humanist scholarship. Leonardo da Vinci
  • 8.  Pope Nicholas V helped a reborn Rome replace Florence as the cultural center of the Renaissance, Raphael, considered the epitome of High Renaissance painters, became particularly famous for his paintings of the Madonna.  Although Michelangelo considered himself a sculptor, he was compelled by Pope Julius II to paint the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. Popes and Great Artists
  • 9.  The musical composer most closely identified with the High Renaissance is Josquin Des Pres, composer and director of the Sistine Choir.  Two famous writers of the period were Castiglione, who supported the tenets of Renaissance humanism, and Machiavelli, who challenged those tenets. Music and Writing
  • 10. Resources Frank, K. View of the Duomo's Dome, Florence. 2008. JPEG. Zacchi, Anna. Sant Andrea Straight. 2006. 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.