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CH 13 RENAISSANCE & REFORMATION 1300-1650. The Renaissance Bell Ringer 11/30  The Renaissance began in Western Europe around the 1300s & peaked around.

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Presentation on theme: "CH 13 RENAISSANCE & REFORMATION 1300-1650. The Renaissance Bell Ringer 11/30  The Renaissance began in Western Europe around the 1300s & peaked around."— Presentation transcript:

1 CH 13 RENAISSANCE & REFORMATION 1300-1650

2 The Renaissance Bell Ringer 11/30  The Renaissance began in Western Europe around the 1300s & peaked around 1500. What was it?  Answer in 3 full sentences.  If you have no idea (don’t worry, we’re about to cover it), it came at the end of the middle ages and the word renaissance itself is French for “Rebirth”.

3 Renaissance = Rebirth What was the Renaissance?  Time of creativity & great change  AgriculturalUrban society  Revived interest in the classical learning  Medieval Renaissance Rome Scholars focused on religion Scholars explored richness of human experience, The here & now Scholars explored richness of human experience, The here & now

4 The revival of trade in Europe helped bring an end to the Middle Ages & gave rise to the Renaissance Increased trade gave rise to Italian city-states & a wealthy middle class of bankers & merchants Wealthy bankers & merchants wanted to show off their new status by commissioning art The rise of cities brought artists together which led to new techniques & styles of art

5 The most important Italian city-state was Florence; In this wealthy trade city, the Renaissance began Florence was home to the Medici family, the wealthiest & most powerful bankers in Europe The Medici used their wealth to commission art for themselves & to beautify Florence

6 Humanism  Intellectual movement at the heart of the Renaissance  Focused on education & the classics  Emphasized humanities (grammar, rhetoric, poetry, & history) Importance of the human (creativity, individuals) not just the divine

7 New styles & techniques of Renaissance art  Realism & emotion  Classicism: inspiration from Greece & Rome  Emphasis on individuals & interaction between people  Geometric arrangements  Perspective  Using light & shadows The first nude paintings & sculptures since the Romans GreekRenaissance

8 Renaissance Artists

9 Donatello  Donatello was the 1 st great sculptor of the Renaissance  Donatello revived the classical (Greco-Roman) style of sculpture that was realistic & could be viewed from all sides  Donatello’s “David” was the 1 st large, free-standing human sculpture of the Renaissance 1386-1466

10 Michelangelo  Michelangelo was one of the most famous Renaissance artists:  He was a painter, sculptor, architect, & poet  His sculptures & paintings showed realism, detail of the human body, & expression to show personality & emotion 1475-1564

11 Michelangelo sculptures “Pieta”& “David” are considered masterpieces

12 Michelangelo’s greatest work is the 130 ft x 44 ft ceiling of the Sistine Chapel which shows Biblical images of amazing detail, power, & beauty

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15 Leonardo da Vinci  “Renaissance Man”  He was a painter & sculptor  His art was known for incredible realism & emotion  He was also an inventor & scientist whose sketches reveal observations about human anatomy & new engineering technology 1452-1519

16 His “Last Supper” shows Jesus’ last meeting with the 12 apostles before the crucifixion; the facial expressions, detail, emotion made it a masterpiece

17 Leonardo da Vinci’s greatest masterpiece was the “Mona Lisa” which was known for its emotion & depth

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19 Vitruvian Man

20 Raphael  Raphael “perfected” Renaissance painting  He improved perspective and realism by studying Leonardo & Michelangelo  Raphael became the favorite painter of the Pope because of his amazing detailed paintings showing a combination of famous Greeks & Romans along with Renaissance people 1483-1520

21 Raphael Michelangelo Plato (drawn to look like Da Vinci) Aristotle Pythagoras Euclid Raphael’s greatest painting was “School of Athens” which blended Classical figures from Greece & Rome with important people from the Renaissance

22 The Northern Renaissance

23 The Renaissance spread from Italy as scholars & merchants from other areas visited Italian city-states As these ideas spread, this “Northern Renaissance” developed its own characteristics

24 The Renaissance in France was most known for its unique architecture

25 The Renaissance in England was most known for literature, especially the plays of William Shakespeare

26 Wedding Portrait by Jan Van Eyck The Renaissance in the Netherlands was most known for realism in art

27 Renaissance Medieval Guess if the following pieces of art (A-F) are: Renaissance or Medieval

28 A

29 B

30 C

31 D

32 E

33 F

34 Florentine Niccolo Machiavelli  Italian historian, writer, scholar  Wrote “The Prince”  A guide for rulers on how to gain & keep power  Use what ever means necessary  Is it better to be loved or feared? 1469-1527 “…is it better to be loved than feared, or vise versa? I don’t doubt that every prince would like to be both; but since it is hard to accommodate these qualities, if you have to make a choice, to be feared is much safer than to be loved. For it is a good general rule about men, that they are ungrateful, fickle, liars, and deceivers, fearful of danger & greedy for gain.”

35 Florentine Niccolo Machiavelli  Italian historian, writer, scholar  Wrote “The Prince”  A guide for rulers on how to gain & keep power  Use what ever means necessary  Is it better to be loved or feared? 1469-1527 “…is it better to be loved than feared, or vise versa? I don’t doubt that every prince would like to be both; but since it is hard to accommodate these qualities, if you have to make a choice, to be feared is much safer than to be loved. For it is a good general rule about men, that they are ungrateful, fickle, liars, and deceivers, fearful of danger & greedy for gain.”

36 Johann Gutenberg  Around 1440, invented a printing press  Began a printing revolution  Aided in the spread of the Renaissance  Before, only a few thousand books in all of Europe

37 Renaissance Writers  Sir Thomas More  English Humanist  Utopia, described ideal society of peace & harmony  William Shakespeare  1590-1613, he wrote 37 plays  His characters spoke in a language the common people could understand  More than1500 words appear for the first time in his writings

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