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Renaissance Literature

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Presentation on theme: "Renaissance Literature"— Presentation transcript:

1 Renaissance Literature

2 The Printed Word C printing press invented by Johann Gutenberg in Germany Decreased costs and time of printing Made material available and affordable for many Encouraged writers and literacy Spread ideas more quickly

3 Italian Renaissance Writers Change Literature
Use of vernacular Dante (Divine Comedy) Petrarch (Sonnets to Laura) Boccaccio (Decameron) Style Petrarch – Italian sonnet Boccaccio – Humor used to illustrate “the human condition” Content Humanism Emphasis on here and now “How to Books”

4 Humanism Literary movement of the Renaissance
Concerned primarily with individuals and the human condition rather than with the soul and life everlasting Drew inspiration from classical civilizations

5 Important Italian Writers
Petrarch – “Father of Humanism” Wrote in both Latin and Italian Developed Italian Sonnet Inspired others to study classics Boccaccio – Decameron Collection of 100 stories told by 10 young people seeking refuge from the plague Uses both tragic and comic views of situations Presents characters as individuals

6 Castiglione The Book of the Courtier Describes the perfect courtier
Well-educated Well-rounded Well-mannered Master of many fields

7 Machiavelli - The Prince
Guide to rulers on how to gain and maintain power Realistic rather than idealistic “The end justifies the means.” “ It is better to be feared than loved.” Strong influence on world politics

8 The Northern Renaissance

9 Flanders today Northern Belgium Prime location – North Sea (English Channel)

10 Northern Humanism Like Italian Humanism
stressed education and classical learning Unlike Italian Humanism - emphasized religion as well - looked to early Christian church for models - believed that the revival of ancient learning should be used to bring about religious and moral reform - more emphasis on community than on the individual

11 Erasmus Dutch priest and humanist “Father of the Northern Renaissance”
The Praise of Folly used humor to expose ignorance, immoral behavior, and corruption including in the Church

12 Sir Thomas More English Renaissance Utopia Describes ideal society
in which men and women live in peace and harmony Today, “utopia” means “an ideal society”

13 How did the Renaissance spread to the “North”?
Through religious, military, and commercial contacts Through artists who traveled and studied in Italy Printing Press (Johann Gutenburg 1450)

14 O Romeo, Romeo! Wherefore art thou Romeo?
My kingdom for a horse! Something is rotten in Denmark. To be or not to be – that is the question. All the world’s a stage…

15 William Shakespeare “greatest poet and playwright of all time”
Peak of English Renaissance Comedies, Histories, Tragedies Characterizations

16 Rabelais Gargantua and Pantagruel on surface: adventures
of 2 gentle giants also, satire on behaviors

17 Cervantes Spanish Renaissance Don Quixote
uses satire to mock feudal society and chivalry about a mad, old knight and his trusty servant, Sancho Panza Don Quixote by Picasso – drawn in only a few minutes

18 Art of the Northern Renaissance

19 Albrecht Dürer German Studied in Italy Famous for woodcuts
and engravings Major influence in the spread of the Renaissance to the North

20 The Hare

21 The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse

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25 The Madona of Chancellor Rolin – Van Eyck

26 Detail of the Virgin’s robe

27 The Ghent Altarpiece Polyptich - The altarpiece represented a "new conception of art", in which the idealization of the medieval tradition gave way to an exacting observation of nature.[3] The altarpiece consists of a total of 24 framed panels, which make up two views, open and closed, which are changed by moving the hinged outer wings.

28 Hans Holbein the Younger
Specialized in portraits that are almost photogenic in detail Henry VIII

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30 Portrait of Edward, Prince of Wales c
Portrait of Edward, Prince of Wales c Oil on oak, 57 x 44 cmNational Gallery of Art, Washington

31 Bruegel – The Peasant Wedding

32 which allegorical and peasant themes run strongly
which allegorical and peasant themes run strongly. His paintings, including his landscapes and scenes of peasant life, stress the absurd and vulgar, yet are full of zest and fine detail. They also expose human weaknesses and follies. He was sometimes called the "peasant Bruegel" from such works as Peasant Wedding Feast (1567). He developed an original style that uniformly holds narrative, or story-telling, meaning. In subject matter he ranged widely, from conventional Biblical scenes and parables of Christ to such mythological portrayals as Landscape with the Fall of Icarus; religious allegories in the style of Hieronymus Bosch; and social satires. But it was in nature that he found his greatest inspiration. His mountain landscapes have few parallels in European art.

33 Hunters in the Snow

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35 Children’s Games

36 Triptych of Garden of Earthly Delights by Hieronymus BOSCH c
Triptych of Garden of Earthly Delights by Hieronymus BOSCH c. 1500Oil on panel, central panel: 220 x 195 cm, wings: 220 x 97 cmMuseo del Prado, Madrid

37 Center Panel

38 Portion of right panel

39 Spain’s El Greco: A View of Toledo

40 Pieta – El Greco

41 Flemish Painter – Peter Paul Rubens

42 Rembrandt Dutch Known for use of color and light

43 The Syndics of the Clothmaker’s Guild (Staalmeesters)

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45 Nightwatch

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