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the reformation

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Q: The artists of the Northern Renaissance were most heavily influenced by?
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Related questions

Roman artists most heavily influenced by artists from?

Greece


The style of Hieronymus Bosch differed from the style of other Northern Renaissance artists because he relied heavily on?

depictions of a fantastical world.


What government was heavily influenced by religion in the renaissance period?

Theocracy


Roman artists were most heavily influenced by artists from?

Artists from ancient Greece were the biggest influence for the Roman artists.


In what ways did literature and the arts change during the Renaissance?

It was heavily influenced by Greek art and literature. Also Humanism wsa created.


The style of hieronymus bosch differed from the style of other northern renaissance artist because he relied heavily on?

depictions of a fantastical world


Did early medieval artists borrow heavily from Egyptian artists?

No, the Minoan civilization


Which European country was heavily influenced by the Roman Catholic Church in the 18th century?

Great Britain was heavily influenced by the Roman Catholic Church.


The US that you know today was heavily influenced by One significant characteristic is the number of from southern states who moved to cities in the northern states?

A. the Great Migration; African Americans


Who was the Protestant iconoclasm of the Renaissance period heavily influenced by?

the reformation


How was the renaissance art different from the art in the middle ages?

Probably the greatest difference between medieval art and the art of the Renaissance is that Renaissance artists wanted to be visually accurate. Renaissance artists studied human anatomy in a way medieval people would probably have found shocking, for example, by watching doctors dissect the bodies of dead people. Renaissance artists also developed and studied linear perspective, which is the same perspective that is produced in a camera. They produced a level of understanding of linear perspective that remained virtually unchanged until advances of the last few decades of the 20th century. Renaissance artists also relied heavily on oil paints, which allowed much more detail in the paintings than could be achieved by the paints used in the Middle Ages. Oils were under development during most of the Middle Ages, but it was not until the Renaissance that they were really perfected. Renaissance artists were less inclined to limit their artwork to religious topics than medieval artists were. The great art of the Middle Ages include a lot of calligraphy and illumination of manuscripts. These, of course, were replaced by typography, wood cut, and engraving during the Renaissance.


How was the arts in middle ages different from during the Renaissance?

Probably the greatest difference between medieval art and the art of the Renaissance is that Renaissance artists wanted to be visually accurate. Renaissance artists studied human anatomy in a way medieval people would probably have found shocking, for example, by watching doctors dissect the bodies of dead people. Renaissance artists also developed and studied linear perspective, which is the same perspective that is produced in a camera. They produced a level of understanding of linear perspective that remained virtually unchanged until advances of the last few decades of the 20th century. Renaissance artists also relied heavily on oil paints, which allowed much more detail in the paintings than could be achieved by the paints used in the Middle Ages. Oils were under development during most of the Middle Ages, but it was not until the Renaissance that they were really perfected. Renaissance artists were less inclined to limit their artwork to religious topics than medieval artists were. The great art of the Middle Ages include a lot of calligraphy and illumination of manuscripts. These, of course, were replaced by typography, wood cut, and engraving during the Renaissance.