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Renaissance Article

Renaissance Key Facts

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The Renaissance (French for “rebirth”) followed the Middle Ages in Europe. The Renaissance period was characterized by a renewed interest in Classical Greek and Roman scholarship and values.
In the 1100s several events occurred that would eventually lead to the Renaissance. Among those were the failure of the Roman Catholic Church to provide a stable framework for the organization of spiritual and material life, the growth in importance of city-states, the rise of national monarchies, and the breakup of old feudal structures.
The spirit of the Renaissance was first expressed by the movement called humanism. Through humanism secular scholars and others broke free of religious orthodoxy, engaged in free inquiry and criticism, and gained confidence in the potentials of human thought and creations.
A “proto-renaissance” occurred in Italy in the late 1200s and early 1300s, based on humanism and the work of St. Francis of Assisi, founder of the Franciscan religious order of the Roman Catholic Church. He was known for praising the beauty and spiritual value of nature. Artists were inspired by his example to take pleasure in the natural world around them and to study beauty as a path to the divine.
The most famous artists of this time included painter Giotto and poet Dante. Giotto rejected the decorative art of his predecessors and developed a clearer, simpler structure and portrayed great psychological depth. Dante’s The Divine Comedy anticipated the more complex studies of human nature common in the Renaissance. Writers Petrarch and Giovanni Boccaccio also belonged to this period.
The Black Death struck Europe in 1347. The disease, combined with civil wars, delayed further advances in the Renaissance until the 1400s.
The Copernican revolution and the invention of the printing press marked important new chapters in scientific study and communications. To many scholars and thinkers of the period, however, the Renaissance was primarily a time of the revival of Classical learning and wisdom after a long period of cultural decline. This revival led to a great flowering in architecture, painting, sculpture, and music.
Architect Filippo Brunelleschi, sculptor Donatello, and painter Masaccio brought rationalized art of ancient Classical traditions to Florence, Italy. Masaccio was considered the founder of Renaissance painting. Other artists, such as Andrea del Verrocchio, were known for their studies ofanatomy and aerial perspective.
Wealthy merchant families in Florence, such as the Medici, funded most of the architecture and artworks of the Renaissance period. The Medici family introduced oil painting to Italy by commissioning The Portinari Altarpiece by Hugo van der Goes, one of the greatest Flemish painters of the second half of the 15th century.
The High Renaissance flourished from the early 1490s to 1527. The three most well-known figures from this time are Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Raphael.
Leonardo (1452–1519) is known as the classic “Renaissance man” because of his wide range of interests, including painting, drawing, sculpture, architecture, human anatomy, science, and engineering. His reputation as a painter is based on only a few works, primarily the Mona Lisa, Last Supper, and The Virgin of the Rocks.
Michelangelo (1475–1564, the most famous sculptor of his time, carved the Pietà and the statue David while in his 20s. His most impressive paintings cover the ceilings and one entire wall of the Sistine Chapel. They portray humanity’s need for salvation.
The works of Raphael (1483–1520) express Classical harmony, beauty, and order. His most well-known work School of Athens shows carefully composed groups of scholars representing Aristotelian and Platonic schools of thought. Raphael used perspective to lead the viewer’s eye toward the central figures of Aristotle and Plato .
Donato Bramante created the High Renaissance architecture with its Classical columns and domes. His masterpiece, the Tempietto at San Pietro in Montorio, and sections of the massive St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome remain the best examples of his work.
The sack of Rome in 1527 by the armies of the Holy Roman emperor Charles V marked the end of the Renaissance as a unified historical period. In a matter of days, thousands of churches, palaces, and houses in Rome were pillaged and destroyed. The artistic style known as Mannerism later predominated in Italy.