Well, the Renaissance is divided into two parts: early and high. So really, the High Renaissance would be considered the transitional period between Early Renaissance and Baroque. In most of Europe, the High Renaissance lasted until about 1600, when the Baroque period began. In Italy, the High Renaissance technically lasted until 1600, but around 1520, another artistic movement became popular: Mannerism. Mannerism was a movement dominated by complicated, intellectual art. Allegories, distorted figures, and complicated compositions are characteristic of this movement. Other Italian artists persisted in the High Renaissance style, so that time frame (1520 to 1600) is still considered to be part of the High Renaissance.
No, the Renaissance period came slightly before the Baroque period. However, a large number of Baroque composers were influenced by Renaissance music.
baroque
By the late Baroque period instrumental music was commonplace and there was an emphasis on depicting string emotions but with strict rhythmic, dynamic, and metric rules. All of those things had just begun to develop in the late Renaissance. Also, the Baroque period had Opera.
Duccio: Late Medieval Raphael: Renaissance Tintoretto: Baroque Greuze: Neoclasssical
True
No, the Renaissance period came slightly before the Baroque period. However, a large number of Baroque composers were influenced by Renaissance music.
renaissance
No, he was of the Renaissance period
Before Baroque was the Renaissance era.
YES!
Claudio Monteverdi a+
baroque
By the late Baroque period instrumental music was commonplace and there was an emphasis on depicting string emotions but with strict rhythmic, dynamic, and metric rules. All of those things had just begun to develop in the late Renaissance. Also, the Baroque period had Opera.
Rembrandt became a painter at the end of the Renaissance period and is said to belong to the Dutch Baroque movement.
No - Renaissance or early Baroque. The latter was followed by the little-noticed Rococo then the Classical period.
False.
A courante is a French dance from the late Renaissance period, or the second movement of a baroque suite.