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SIZE
Size They were done on a smaller scale
He became associated with the Italian Renaissance Movement making paintings with the characteristics of the Late Renaissance. He used the Mannerist style to make his painting.
the mona lisa and the madonna enthroned between two angels paintings
The leaders of the Italian Renaissance was michelangelo
SIZE
Size They were done on a smaller scale
Size They were done on a smaller scale
Paintings and sculptures in Italian High Renaissance style of course since he was IN Italian High Renaissance.
Italian High Renaissance.
Robert Oertel has written: 'Italian painting from the Trecento to the end of the Renaissance' -- subject(s): Italian Paintings, Paintings, Italian 'Italian painting'
He became associated with the Italian Renaissance Movement making paintings with the characteristics of the Late Renaissance. He used the Mannerist style to make his painting.
Michelangelo was primarily a sculptor (e.g. the David statue) during the High Renaissance, but he is also famous for his paintings in the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican.
It was an epic novel of idealized heroism, which became a model for Italian men.it summarized christian thought in Italy during the Renaissance.
To a trained eye they look different.
the mona lisa and the madonna enthroned between two angels paintings
Northern Renaissance versus Italian Renaissance Italian Renaissance's main medium were Frescos. In Northern Europe, they used oil. (See DaVinci's "The Last Supper" and Jan Van Eyck's "Arnolfini Wedding") During the Reformation and Counter Reformation, Italian painters made Catholic Church commissioned paintings. In the North, the paintings had far more secular subjects, and they had darker religious themes (if indeed the subject were religious). See artists/architects: Italian Renaissance Artists: Giotto, Donatello, Ghiberti, Brunelleschi, Masaccio, Boticelli, DaVinci, Michelangelo, Raphael, Titian, Palladio, Caravaggio, Gentileschi*, Bernini* Non-Italian Renaissance Artists: Limbourg Brothers, Christine de Pizan, Campin, Van der Weyden, Durer, Grunewald, Bosch, Bruegel, Rubens*, Rembrant*, Vermeer* * indicates a post Renaissance theme (Mannarism, Baroque, etc)