Transcript 2)Mannerism
Mannerism – Late Renaissance
Mannerist Style Characteristics
Elongated bodies or body parts
Paintings appear to be stretched out
Focus on spiritual aspect of art
Mannerism
Madonna with the Long Neck
1534 – 1540
Florence, Italy
Artist: Parmagianino
Mannerist style preferred
distorted figures; elongated;
artificial
Figures crowded into left side –
viewer is drawn to different
areas of painting
Not just one focus
Jacopo da Pontormo
Descent from the Cross
Capponi Chapel, Santa Felicità, Florence, Italy
1525-1528
oil on wood
10 ft. 3 in. x 6 ft. 6 in.
Considered his masterpiece
Mannerism
Allegory with Venus and Cupid
1546
Florence, Italy
Artist: Agnolo Bronzino
Court painter for Cosimo I de
Medici
Mannerism was meant for
nobility to enjoy not the general
public
Space full of figures
Shows an oddly erotic
encounter
Bodies elongated and distorted
Mannerism
Last Supper
1592 – 1594
Venice, Italy
Artist: Tintoretto
If it weren’t for the halo,
Jesus would be hard to find
Perspective leads away
from Christ
Darker version
Judas in traditional spot on
opposite side of table
Paolo Veronese
Christ in the House of Levi
1573
oil on canvas
18 ft. 6 in. x 42 ft. 6 in.
The Venetian use of blue is still key in Mannerism – had
to change name of painting
Paolo Veronese
Triumph ofVenice
ca. 1585
oil on canvas
approximately 29 ft. 8 in. x 19 ft.
Ceilings became the perfect place for illusion paintings
El Greco
(Domenikos Theotokopoulous)
Mary Magdalene in Penitence
1577
oil on canvas
42 1/2 x 39 7/8 in.
El Greco was born in Greece, studied in Italy and painted
in Spain – as such he is a unique painter in many ways
El Greco
(Domenikos Theotokopoulous)
View of Toledo
1586
oil on canvas
47 3/4 x 42 3/4 in.
The most famous of the mannerist painters
Mannerism
The Burial of Count Orgaz
1586
Toledo, Spain
Artist: El Greco
His masterpiece
Local aristocracy attends at
bottom as Christ and Saints
welcome his soul at the top
Elongated forms are typical
Mannerism
Saltcellar of Francis I
1539 – 1543
Paris, France
Artist: Benvenuto Cellini
An ornamental salt and pepper
holder for the king of France
Salt is represented by the sea
and pepper by the earth
Gold and enamel
Mannerism
Perseus
1545 – 1554
Florence, Italy
Artist: Cellini
Blood drips from the
beheaded Medusa as
Perseus holds it up
triumphantly
A masterpiece of Mannerist
art
Giovanni Bologna (Jean de Boulogne). Rape of the Sabine
Women. 1579-83.
Height: 13’ 5-1/2”.
Mannerism
Vestibule of Laurentian Library
1524 – 1559
Florence, Italy
Artists: Michelangelo, Vasari &
Ammanati
Higher than long or wide
Niches taper up – smaller at
bottom than top
Same with pilasters, columns set
into the wall
3 separate sets of steps but 1
doorway
Mannerism
Villa Rotunda
1567 – 1570
Vicenza, Italy
Artist: Palladio
Symmetry was crucial to
Palladio, even the gardens
are symmetrical
All 4 sides are identical
Monticello in Virginia,
Jefferson’s home was based
in this building
Giacomo della Porta
façade of Il Gesù
Rome, Italy
ca. 1575-1584
Still in basic Renaissance style – just longer than
necessary
Juan Bautista de Toledo and Juan de Herrera. The Escorial:
aerial view. 1563-84.
The end
Next lecture….
Northern Renaissance