Painting in the Renaissance

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Painting in the Renaissance Page 2

by Una D'Elia


  through the city.

  most of the wealth and power during the

  Renaissance, but a few exceptional noble

  women became patrons too. Isabella d’Este

  Applying for a Job

  was a woman of noble birth who, at the age

  At the beginning of his career, the

  of 17, married the much older Francesco

  famous Italian painter Leonardo da Vinci

  Gonzaga, the marquis, or ruler, of the

  applied to the Duke of Milan for work

  northern Italian city of Mantua. Isabella

  as a court artist. Leonardo wrote that

  delighted in the arts. She played several

  he could design weapons, fortifications,

  musical instruments, hired a private tutor to

  hydraulics, and bronze sculptures. Only

  at the end of this letter did he mention,

  teach her Latin literature, owned a collection

  as if it were not important, that he could

  of ancient and Renaissance jewels and

  also paint. Leonardo wanted to show

  sculptures, and commissioned portraits

  that he had many skills to make himself

  and paintings of religious and mythological

  more useful than other artists wishing

  subjects from famous artists, including

  to work for the duke.

  Leonardo da Vinci.

  9

  Becoming a Painter

  In the Renaissance, most painters were

  Michelangelo Buonarotti was apprenticed to

  men, but a few were women. They began

  the highly successful painter and expert in

  their training as apprentices, paying to

  fresco painting, Domenico Ghirlandaio, in

  work under established painters, called

  his busy workshop in Florence. Later in life,

  “masters.” Many worked as assistants

  however, he wanted everyone to think that

  until they became masters themselves.

  he was a natural artistic genius and had

  needed no training, so he lied and denied

  Life as an Apprentice

  ever having been an apprentice.

  Most apprentices were boys of about 12 to

  14 years of age who trained in a workshop.

  They lived in rooms attached to masters’

  Odd Apprenticeship

  workshops and, at first, did small jobs, such

  Michelangelo’s father always wanted

  as cleaning up the workshops and grinding

  his son to become a musician, but

  and mixing paints. They practiced drawing,

  Michelangelo had other ideas. At the

  age of 13, he became an apprentice

  learned to work with different types of paint

  to the painter Domenico Ghirlandaio.

  and to copy the style of their masters. They

  Unlike other apprentices, Michelangelo

  also painted backgrounds and other less

  did not have to pay for his apprenticeship.

  important parts of their masters’ works.

  Instead, because of his great talent, he

  It could take about seven years for an

  was paid by the master.

  artist to finish an apprenticeship.

  Michelangelo’s first large

  painting was the ceiling of

  the Sistine Chapel, which

  was painted from 1508 to

  1512 for Pope Julius II. Some

  artists who were jealous of

  Michelangelo hoped that the

  young artist would not know

  how to do a large fresco

  painting, but Michelangelo

  had learned all the techniques

  as Ghirlandaio’s apprentice.

  10

  Several Skills

  A workshop could make a wide variety of

  the main parts of paintings. It was quite

  artistic objects, such as stained glass, pottery,

  common for an assistant to paint the entire

  sculpture, and items in metal such as gold,

  work, following a master’s drawing. The

  silver, or bronze. A master might be hired to

  master would then sign and sell the work

  design a building or a set for a theater. An

  as his own. This was acceptable at the time,

  apprentice could study not only how to

  since the assistant was painting the master’s

  become a painter but also a wide range

  idea in the master’s style.

  of other skills, such as goldsmithing,

  mathematics, engineering, and architecture.

  Women as Painters

  Female painters were mostly the daughters

  An Assistant’s Work

  of painters. They were usually trained at

  After finishing their apprenticeships, few

  home by their fathers, since it was not

  painters could afford to set up their own

  considered proper for young women

  workshops, so most worked for at least a few

  to move out of their homes and join

  years as assistants. They helped masters by

  workshops. The Italian painter Sofonisba

  painting backgrounds, and sometimes even

  Anguissola was an exception. The daughter

  of a learned gentleman,

  Sofonisba apprenticed in a

  workshop, although she still

  lived at home, and eventually

  became a successful painter in

  Italy and Spain. Sofonisba

  painted self-portraits, images

  of her sisters, and formal

  portraits of the Spanish

  royal family.

  A self-portrait of Sofonisba

  Anguissola at an easel in 1556.

  She continued to paint even

  after she was married and had

  children, which was rare at a

  time when most women stayed at

  home to take care of their families

  and households.

  11

  Perspective and Light

  Before the Renaissance, subjects in

  that the closer an object is, the larger it

  paintings looked flat and unrealistic,

  appears to the viewer. Previously, artists had

  not three dimensional and lifelike.

  just made the most important figures in the

  Renaissance artists began using

  painting the largest.

  perspective and new ways of painting

  light to add depth to their paintings

  Linear perspective also makes use of the

  and to make their work more realistic.

  illusion that parallel lines seem to meet as

  they get closer to the horizon. The point

  Linear Perspective

  where the parallel lines appear to meet at

  Linear perspective was invented in the early

  the horizon is called the vanishing point.

  1400s in Florence, Italy. The architect Filippo

  Artists would ensure all horizontal lines were

  Brunelleschi used mathematical formulas in

  directed towards the vanishing point in the

  two painted scenes of the city of Florence,

  painting. Another element to creating linear

  Italy, to create perspective. His scenes were

  perspective is that the more distant objects

  a big influence on later Renaissance artists.

  are painted smaller and placed closer

  Linear perspective is based on the principle

  together than those closer to the viewer.

  We do not know the name o
f the artists who painted this view, which is not of a real city but an imaginary place. It is painted in correct linear perspective, with all of the lines of the pavement and the buildings that head into the picture converging on one point, in order to create an illusion of depth.

  12

  Aerial Perspective

  Artists also began to use aerial perspective.

  They noticed that when they looked into the

  distance, faraway objects appeared blue in

  color and less clear than closer objects.

  Scientists now understand that this is a

  result of how light travels through the

  atmosphere. To create this feeling in the

  backgrounds of their works, artists painted

  crisp-looking rivers, hills, trees, and buildings

  fading into a blue haze in the far distance.

  Light and Shade

  In the Renaissance, painters began using

  light and shade to help viewers picture the

  shapes of objects and to imagine what the

  objects would feel like. First, painters decided

  This painting by Masaccio, from the early

  on the direction the light was coming from.

  1400s, uses light and shadow to add realism

  Then, they painted all the objects facing the

  and emotion to the painting.

  light as bright and painted shadows on

  the opposite sides. They also painted cast

  shadows, the shadows that the objects

  Masaccio

  cast on the ground. This made painted

  objects and figures look real and heavy,

  One of the first Renaissance artists

  just as though they could be touched.

  since the ancients to use correct linear

  perspective and realistic light and

  shadow was Masaccio, from Florence.

  Artists also used light to convey emotions,

  Masaccio used light to make Jesus look

  such as the cheerfulness of a bright day or

  like a real baby, sitting on his mother’s

  the sad mystery of darkness. The use of light

  lap. Bright light on Jesus’s face makes

  and shade for strong contrast is called

  him glow and look divine. Shadow on

  chiaroscuro. In Italian, the word chiaro

  Mary’s face and the throne suggests

  means “light,” and oscuro means “dark,” so

  Mary’s sorrow, as if she knows that her

  chiaroscuro is a technique that uses both

  child will later suffer. Masaccio drew

  the throne to make it seem as if Mary

  areas of bright light with areas of dark

  and Jesus are looming over the viewer.

  shadow. Works by artists such as Leonardo

  da Vinci and Raphael use this technique.

  13

  Religious Art

  Most European paintings in the

  scenes on the walls and ceilings of churches,

  Renaissance were religious and depicted

  and on altarpieces, which are paintings on

  Christian scenes. Christians worship one

  wooden panels or canvas that were placed

  God and believe in the divinity of Jesus

  up on altars in churches. Artists also painted

  Christ. Until the 1500s, the main Christian

  smaller religious paintings, which inspired

  church was the Roman Catholic Church,

  prayer in homes and monasteries.

  which is led by the pope.

  Scenes Come to Life

  Uses for Christian Painting

  Artists in the Renaissance often showed

  Many people in the Renaissance did not

  scenes of the lives of saints as if they were

  know how to read, so looking at paintings

  happening in their own towns and in

  of religious scenes was one way for them

  their own time. This helped people feel a

  to learn about their religion. Artists painted

  connection with the saints. Robert Campin’s

  stories from the Bible and from the lives of

  Mérode Altarpiece is an example of this. He

  saints, as well as beautiful visions of Heaven

  even put the painting’s patrons in the scene

  and terrifying views of Hell, to teach people

  as the couple peeking in the door at Mary

  how to lead good lives. They painted these

  and the angel Gabriel.

  The Mérode Altarpiece , by Flemish artist Robert Campin, shows the Annunciation, when the angel Gabriel told Mary she was pregnant with Jesus. Although Christians believed this event happened in the Middle East 1,400 years before, the figures are painted in a Belgian living room.

  14

  Other artists painted this scene, which

  shows the angel Gabriel telling Mary that

  she is pregnant with Jesus. Fra Angelico

  chose a simple setting and costumes, so

  that the friar who would pray in front of

  the painting would not be distracted.

  Religious attacks against art also took

  place in Northern Europe in the 1500s.

  At the time, some Christians felt that the

  church, led by the pope, had become

  corrupt. They decided to form their own

  Religious At acks Against Art

  branch of Christianity, which became

  Most Christians believed that paintings

  known as Protestantism. Protestants

  helped people be good, but some attacked

  believed in praying directly to God and in

  paintings. Around 1500, a friar in Florence

  reading God’s word in the Bible, rather

  named Savonarola preached that Christians

  than using ceremonies and art to express

  should be humble and not lead lavish lives,

  their devotion, as Catholics did. Protestants

  or own expensive works of art and sculpture.

  also feared that uneducated people might

  The famous painter, Botticelli, apparently

  think that the paintings themselves were

  heard Savonarola’s preaching and was so

  gods, and worship the paintings instead of

  inspired that he burned some of his own

  worshiping God. Crowds of Protestants burst

  nonreligious pictures and painted only

  into churches, smashed works of art, and

  religious ones after that.

  scratched out the eyes of painted figures.

  Fra Angelico

  Guido di Pietro, who lived in Florence in

  There, he painted scenes of Jesus Christ

  the 1400s, earned the name Fra Angelico

  and the saints on the monastery’s bedroom

  or “angelic friar,” because he lived like a

  walls. Fra Angelico’s paintings had no

  saint. A master of his own shop, he gave

  gold, expensive pigments, ornaments,

  up his income and home to become a friar

  or background details that might

  and live in a monastery.

  distract the friars from their prayers.

  15

  Walls and Ceilings

  Renaissance artists painted on walls

  made many drawings of the subject. The

  and ceilings using fresco, an ancient

  painter then made a drawing of the whole

  technique in which paint is applied to wet

  painting, called a cartoon, which was the

  plaster. When the plaster dries, it forms

  same size as the finished work.

  crystals around the bits of pigment in the

  p
aint, so frescoes become part of the wall.

  From Drawings to Fresco

  To transfer the image, artists placed

  Preparing to Paint

  the cartoon on the wall or ceiling, then

  “Fresco” is Italian for fresh. Renaissance

  drew over the lines with a pointed metal

  artists painted in buon fresco, or fresh plaster.

  instrument called a stylus, pushing on

  The frescoes had to be painted quickly, while

  the paper to create indentations in the soft

  the plaster was wet, so artists had to know

  plaster. Another technique was to prick tiny

  beforehand exactly what it was they wanted

  holes along the lines of the cartoon, then

  to paint. The only way to correct a mistake

  dust charcoal over the holes so that it went

  was to chip out a section of the plaster and

  through the holes and formed dotted lines

  begin again. To prepare for a fresco, artists

  along the wall.

  Raphael painted this fresco of

  the ancient Greek philosophers

  discussing ideas and teaching

  students. In the center, Plato

  points up to the heavens as

  the source for truth, whereas

  Aristotle points down at the

  ground, because he believes

  that we need to observe the

  natural world to find truth.

  This fresco was painted in

  the pope’s library. The pope’s

  books of ancient philosophy

  were kept below it.

  16

  Leonardo da Vinci did not

  want to paint his Last Supper

  in fresco, which dries very

  quickly, since he was always

  changing his mind about how

  to pose figures in his works.

  He tried painting on the dried

  plaster instead, but almost

  as soon as this painting was

  finished, the paint started

  falling off the wall. Artists

  and conservation scientists

  have been working to restore

  it ever since.

  Using the indentations or dots as a guide,

  the fresco, he had to bend like a bow so that

  the artist painted the scene’s outlines in one

  his brain rested on his back. So much plaster

  color. The artist then applied a fine top layer

  and paint fell on his face that he looked like

  of plaster to a small part of the image, as

  a tiled floor. In a little sketch of himself next

  much as he could paint in one day, while the

  to the poem, he drew himself twisted into an

 

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