No era of artistic achievement is as renowned as the
Renaissance, and no country holds a higher place in that period than
Italy. The supreme works created in Florence, Rome, Venice, and other
Italian cities by such masters as Leonardo da Vinci, Botticelli,
Michelangelo, Raphael, and Titian have never equaled and have
established a canon of beauty that pervades Western culture to this day.
"These
Arts, in their highest province, are not addressed to the gross senses,
but to the desires of the mind, to that spark of divinity which we have
within."
—Sir Joshua Reynolds, 1786
To view these works is
to enter a world that is incomparably rich, filled with emotion and
drama that is palpable, though sometimes mysterious to our modern
sensibility.
To study these works with an expert is to penetrate
that mystery and gain a new appreciation for how these masterpieces were
created and what they meant to the artists and people of the time.
Experience the Vision of Great Art with an Expert Guide
Professor
William Kloss is your guide through this visual feast in an
artist-centered survey that explores hundreds of paintings and
sculptures by scores of artists.
An independent art historian,
scholar, and curator, Professor Kloss is a frequent lecturer for the
Smithsonian Institution's seminar and travel program. He has served on
the Committee for the Preservation of the White House by presidential
appointment since 1990, and he is the author of several books and
exhibition catalogs.
Commenting on Kloss's eloquent writing, The Washington Post marveled that "his pointed and persuasive perceptions are not easily resisted."
Unlock the Mysteries of Renaissance Art
Take Botticelli's Primavera,
a bewitching allegory of springtime featuring two gods, three
goddesses, the three Graces, and Cupid, set in a lush orange grove. Its
sheer beauty transfixes visitors to Florence's Uffizi Gallery, where it
hangs today. But what does it mean?
Noting that for centuries
scholars have debated the painting's symbolism, Professor Kloss directs
your attention to a few intriguing details:
- The orange
tree foliage makes a halo around the central figure of Venus, connecting
her with the Virgin Mary. According to Renaissance thought, Venus may
also represent humanitas—culture or civilization.
- On
the right, flowers float from the mouth of the nymph Cloris, and her
finger is merging with a flower in the gown of Flora, goddess of spring.
One is metamorphosing into the other as spring arrives in this ideal
glade of divine love.
- Meanwhile on the left, Mercury is waving
his staff to dispel a tiny patch of clouds. He is clearing the
atmosphere—the intellect—for the three Graces who represent culture and
the arts.
Professor Kloss then points out another equally
rich interpretation and concludes, "A bad artist could do terrible
things with such a complex story, but fortunately a great artist was at
hand to visualize this elaborate subject." The same can be
said for all of the artists in this course, and it is through their
distinctive styles, innovations, and matchless skill that you learn
about this remarkable period.
What Is the Renaissance?
These
lectures cover art history at the times of the Early Renaissance and
the High Renaissance, which extended from about 1400 to about 1520.
Italy is the first and principal location of the Renaissance, and it was
in Florence that it took its deepest root.
The word renaissance
means rebirth, and it is the name given to the transition from medieval
to modern times in Europe, when the rediscovery of ancient Greek and
Roman culture sparked a creative revolution in the humanities, the
sciences, and the arts.
Humanism, a philosophical, literary, and
artistic ideal, went hand in hand with this rebirth. It emphasized the
dignity and potential of humanity and inspired secular studies, as well
as the creation of art that reflected the forms and ideas of the
Classical era. Renaissance society—and art—was permeated with religion.
In
the arts, this new approach encompassed powerful new techniques for
representing the human figure and the visible world, and also new
attitudes about the roles of artists in society. From a modest rank as
craftsman, the artist gradually rose to a status comparable to poets and
philosophers.
Examine Works by More Than 40 Great Artists
The
first 25 lectures examine the artists of Central Italy, where Florence
is located, then the focus shifts to Northern Italy. You cover the works
of more than 40 artists, among them:
- Filippo Brunelleschi and Donatello:
One an architect, the other a sculptor, they were the principal
founders of the Renaissance style. Florence cannot be properly
understood without looking at Brunelleschi's buildings, notably his dome
for the Florence Cathedral. The influence of Donatello's sculpture was
unequalled before Michelangelo.
- Masaccio: The
greatest painter of the Early Renaissance is studied in two lectures; he
is compared to Giotto, the great "proto-Renaissance" master of a
century earlier.
- Piero della Francesca: Now
considered one of the greatest Renaissance painters, he was primarily
associated with smaller urban centers such as Urbino and Arezzo, where
he created the fresco cycle The Legend of the True Cross.
- Botticelli:
Two lectures are devoted to this master whose wistful grace gave way to
anguished expression as the religious climate in Florence took a
fanatical turn under the reformer Savonarola.
- Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Raphael: For
many, this triumvirate is synonymous with the High Renaissance. Their
influence and fame have scarcely waned from their day to our own. Seven
lectures are devoted to their work.
- Andrea Mantegna:
Master painter in Padua and Mantua, his art has a sculptural quality
combined with rich color and a spirit of pathos. He was also an
innovator in spatial illusionism in painting.
- Carpaccio and Gentile Bellini:
This pair excelled in rendering contemporary Venice in vivid narrative
cycles. They are included in an eight-lecture sequence on Venice, the
proud center of culture in northern, Adriatic Italy.
- Antonello da Messina and Giovanni Bellini:
Both working in Venice, they achieved such brilliant effects with the
new oil medium that they inspired many other artists to adopt it.
Giovanni Bellini was the younger brother of Gentile.
- Giorgione and Titian:
From Giovanni Bellini's workshop came two artists who helped define the
Venetian High Renaissance. Giorgione altered the development of Western
art, and Titian blended the achievements of Giorgione, central Italian
painting, and his own coloristic genius into a style of stirring beauty.
Some of the Art You See
The
visual content of this course puts it in a class with heavily
illustrated art books. Some 500 images of paintings, sculptures, prints,
drawings, maps, buildings, and architectural details are featured. Many
works are explored in considerable depth, with searching commentary by
Professor Kloss that is both enlightening and personal. For example:
- Church of San Lorenzo, by Brunelleschi:
"Brunelleschi's architecture reflects the scale of the human being. I
have a greater sense of calm and comfort and well-being in that church
than any other Italian church until we get to the work of Palladio well
over 100 years later. It's an extraordinary experience."
- St. George,
by Donatello: "The widespread legs of the figure and the central axis
of the shield lead us up to the head, the vigilant, intelligent head, a
thinking head. We take it far too much for granted, but Donatello has
been able to give the power of thought to the head of George."
- Ginevra de' Benci,
by Leonardo da Vinci: "The strangely unemotional character of the face,
the dreamy eyes, don't really connect with ours. This seems to be more
of a projection of Leonardo's own secretive personality than a record of
the sitter's. I think that it is generally true of portrait artists
that they project themselves to a large degree onto their sitters."
- The Sistine Chapel Ceiling,
by Michelangelo: "Do I think that the Sistine Ceiling was the victim of
a poor or careless restoration? No, I do not; emphatically, I do not.
These are the colors that we should have expected to see. These are in
fact the colors of much later 16th-century Italian painting. We always
knew that Michelangelo invented the poses of the human body that were
used by everyone for the rest of the century. Now we know that he may
have invented the colors as well."
- Baldassare Castiglione,
by Raphael: "Look in his eyes. Look at the wonderful blue-green of his
eyes against the flesh tones and against the grayish background. The
color scheme of the whole thing is a flawless consonance of gray, black,
flesh tones, of perfectly defined volumes, persuasive description, and
in every sense it's the true likeness of the man. It is what we call a
speaking likeness."
- The Tempest, by
Giorgione: "This is one of the most puzzling paintings in art history.
My preferred explanation: The soldier and the broken columns symbolize
fortitude or constancy. The woman and child stand for Christian love.
The threatening storm over the town and the country is a symbol of
fortune or chance. What is distinctly uncommon here is the subordination
of the emblematic devices to the evocative landscape. This is the first
instance of Italian painting in which a landscape is given the
principal role, not just a supporting role, but the principal role."
You
discuss many other major masterpieces in detail, from Giotto's frescoes
for the Arena Chapel and Ghiberti's bronze doors for the Florence
Baptistery to Leonardo's The Last Supper and Michelangelo's Last Judgment.
Terms and Techniques
Professor
Kloss offers other insights as well. Did you know that it is incorrect
to refer to Leonardo as "da Vinci," which is not his last name but the
indication of his town of birth? Or that the Renaissance was put on hold
for half a century due to the Black Death? Or that Renaissance marble
sculpture was sometimes painted?
You also learn how to recognize
saints from the symbols that accompany them: St. Paul by his sword, St.
Peter by his keys, and St. Jerome by the stone in his hand with which he
strikes himself in penance for his sins.
Of great use in your further studies are the terms and techniques that Professor Kloss explains:
- In Italian, the 14th century is called the Trecento. The literal meaning is 300, but it is shorthand for the 1300s. Likewise, the 15th century is called the Quattrocento and the 16th the Cinquecento. These Italian terms are commonly used in art historical writing and speaking about Italian art.
- Fresco means fresh in Italian. The technique involves painting on a shallow layer of freshly troweled wet plaster (the intonaco)
with water-based pigments, which penetrate into the plaster. Rapid
execution is required before the plaster sets overnight, allowing one
working day. The area that can be covered is thus called a giornata (day, or day's work).
- In
linear or one-point perspective, the vanishing point corresponds to the
spectator's viewpoint, and that is why the pictorial space can be felt
as an extension of the viewer's real space. Leon Battista Alberti, the
architect who first published a formulation of these principles in 1435,
likened the picture surface to a window.
- Drying oils such
as linseed oil and walnut oil form a solid film when exposed to the air
for long enough time. Because they dry slowly, they can be applied
evenly over a wide surface. The color, bound in the oil, has a richness
and a luminosity that comes from the translucency of the medium.
- Uffizi, the name of the famous museum in Florence, in English means simply offices—the original function of the museum building.
The Renaissance: 120 Years That Transformed Art
In
the final two lectures, Professor Kloss looks at the Renaissance as a
whole and surveys the political, social, and religious events of the
early 16th century that brought profound change to Italy and the rest of
Europe. He then examines how art inevitably changed as a result.
Altogether,
the Renaissance lasted about 120 years, and the period of the High
Renaissance a little over 40 years. No later Western art can be
discussed without reference to this era—especially as it matured and
flourished in the cities of Italy.