An apprentice's first tasks were humble: sweeping, running errands, preparing the wooden panels for painting, and grinding and mixing pigments. As the apprentice's skills grew, he would begin to learn from his master: drawing sketches, copying paintings, casting sculptures, and assisting in the simpler aspects of creating art works.
The best students would assist the master with important commissions, often painting background and minor figures while the Master painted the main subjects. The few apprentices who showed amazing skill could eventually become masters themselves. A very few became greater artists than their masters. One legend tells of the young Leonardo da vinci painting an angel so perfectly that his master Verrocchio broke his brushes in two and gave up painting forever in recognition of his pupil's superior abilities.
What renaissance values are embodied in this painting?
An apprentice becomes a journeyman, and a journeyman becomes a master.
The use of perspective changed. Central perspective was invented early in renaissance.
The European country that led the way in Renaissance painting and sculpture was, and still is, Italy.
two advances are sculpting and painting
Jan van Eyck.
The Florentine masters were a handful of master artists from the renaissance period. Usually interested in painting.
A master.
The usual step between apprentice and Master is called "journeyman".
No. There was no art school, as we know them today during the Renaissance. Leonardo studied at Verrocchio's Workshop as an apprentice to master Verrocchio.
a master
Master.
What renaissance values are embodied in this painting?
It is a matter of definition. Some authorities label the Flemish 1400s as 'Late Gothic'. 'I would not mind calling this Renaissance art.
an apprentice is like when someone is following someone to learn something. You know, like master and apprentice?
A key feature of Renaissance painting is that they have perspective and depth.
apprentice, journeyman, master