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Chapter 15 - Renaissance and Reformation

Chapter 15 - Renaissance and Reformation. Vitruvian man by Leonardo da Vinci, 1492. Section 1 - The Italian Renaissance. Main Idea

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Chapter 15 - Renaissance and Reformation

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  1. Chapter 15 - Renaissance and Reformation Vitruvian man by Leonardo da Vinci, 1492

  2. Section 1 - The Italian Renaissance

  3. Main Idea In Italy the growth of wealthy trading cities and new ways of thinking helped lead to a rebirth of the arts and learning. This era became known as the Renaissance. Section 1 - The Italian Renaissance • Reading Focus • What changes in society and in cities stimulated the beginning of the Renaissance? • What ideas formed the foundation of the Italian Renaissance? • What contributions did artists make to the Renaissance?

  4. I. The Beginning of the Renaissance Began in Italy – city-states were centers of trade and manufacturing

  5. I. The Beginning of the Renaissance Result of changes caused by Black Death and renewed interest in ancient Greece and Rome

  6. I. The Beginning of the Renaissance A wealthy merchant class – bankers and traders - promoted cultural rebirth

  7. I. The Beginning of the Renaissance Florence, Venice and Milan grew in power & came to symbolized the Italian Renaissance Skyline of Florence with the Duomo cathedral

  8. I. The Beginning of the Renaissance The wealthy became patrons of the arts - played a major role by sponsoring artists

  9. I. The Beginning of the Renaissance Medici family of Florence were very important - richest bankers and merchants in Europe Botticelli's "The Adoration of the Magi" (1476) with the Medici family and friends

  10. I. The Beginning of the Renaissance Lorenzo Medici – patron who supported the most talented poets, artists and philosophers Raphael's Lorenzo de' Medici

  11. II. Renaissance Ideas Renaissance = rebirth; a change in the way people viewed themselves and their world Auguste Rodin - The Thinker (1902)

  12. II. Renaissance Ideas Thinkers explored life with a secular, or worldly, focus rather than just a religious one A Goldsmith in his Shop Petrus Christus, 1449

  13. II. Renaissance Ideas Secular writers wrote in the vernacular; included Castiglione and Machiavelli Baldassare Castiglione Niccolò Machiavelli

  14. II. Renaissance Ideas Scientists included Nicholas Copernicus, first to suggest a heliocentric theory of the universe (Zwolteh)

  15. II. Renaissance Ideas Humanism - focused on classic subjects and individual achievement

  16. II. Renaissance Ideas Based on study of classical culture: grammar, rhetoric, poetry, and history

  17. II. Renaissance Ideas Believed education should stimulate an individual’s creative powers

  18. III. Renaissance Art Renaissance art reflected humanist ideas The Birth Of Venus by Sandro Botticelli (1485)

  19. III. Renaissance Art Artists developed techniques such as perspective for realistic paintings

  20. Realism - Medieval art not realistic

  21. Renaissance art - realistic

  22. III. Renaissance Art The Architect of Rome, Donato Bramante, designed St. Peter’s Basilica

  23. III. Renaissance Art The most celebrated artists were Leonardo da Vinci The Last Supper Mona Lisa

  24. The Pieta Michelangelo David The Creation of Adam

  25. Raphael Raphael’s School of Athens is famous for depicting figures of the Classical past with the features of his Renaissance contemporaries The Crucifixion

  26. Donatello Donatello's bronze statue of David (c. 1425–1430) Donatello's equestrian statue at Padua, the first example of such a monument since ancient times (1445–1450)

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