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Chateau Saint Ulrich France
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Colors of the Bora Bora Lagoon French Polynesia
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Autumn Vine Maple and Lichens - 1600x1200 - ID 33826 - PREMIUM
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Antarctic Travels
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El Yunque Rainforest Puerto Rico - 1600x1200 - ID 38623 - PREMIUM
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Blue Nile Falls Ethiopia - 1600x1200 - ID 31689 - PREMIUM
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First Strike - 1600x1200 - ID 43838 - PREMIUM
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Yoho National Park British Columbia - 1600x1200 - ID 31836 - PREMIUM
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Bald Cyprus Trees Reelfoot Lake Tennessee
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Alaska Range Alaska - 1600x1200 - ID 17486 - PREMIUM
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Tai Shan
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chicago river
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Yemen
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Yemen
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Renaissance and Mannerism

The Renaissance is said by many to be the golden age of painting. In Italy artists like Paolo Uccello, Piero della Francesca, Sandro Botticelli, Leonardo Da Vinci, Michelangelo Buonarroti, Raphael and Titian took painting to a higher level through the use of perspective, the study of human anatomy and proportion, and through their development of an unprecedented refinement in drawing and painting techniques.

Flemish, Dutch and German painters of the Renaissance such as Albrecht Dürer, Lucas Cranach, Matthias Grünewald, Hieronymous Bosch and Pieter Brueghel represent a different approach from their Italian colleagues, one that is more realistic and less idealized. The adoption of oil painting (whose invention was traditionally, but erroneously, credited to Jan Van Eyck), made possible a new verisimilitude in depicting reality. Unlike the Italians whose work drew heavily from the art of ancient Greece and Rome, the northerners retained a stylistic residue of the sculpture and illuminated manuscripts of the Middle Ages.

Renaissance painting reflects the revolution of ideas and science (astronomy, geography) that occur in this period, the Reformation, and the invention of the printing press. Dürer, considered one of the greatest of printmakers, states that painters are not mere artisans but thinkers as well. With the development of easel painting in the Renaissance, painting gained independence from architecture. Following centuries dominated by religious imagery, secular subject matter returned to Western painting as artists painted the world around them, or the products of their own imaginations. Those who could afford the expense could commission portraits of themselves or their family.

In the sixteenth century, movable pictures came into popular demand, which could be hung easily on walls and moved around at will, rather than paintings being made on permanent structures, such as altars and other solid structures.

The late Renaissance gave rise to a stylized art known as Mannerism. In place of the balanced compositions and rational approach to perspective that characterized art at the dawn of the sixteenth century, the Mannerists sought instability, artifice, and doubt. The unperturbed faces and gestures of Piero della Francesca and the calm Virgins of Raphael are replaced by the troubled expressions of Pontormo and the emotional intensity of El Greco.

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Madonna of the Rosengarden
Botticelli, Sandro
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Posted by admin (0/5 score,3 hits)

Apostles Peter and Paul
Greco, El
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Posted by admin (0/5 score,10 hits)

Medallion 7
Michelangelo
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Posted by admin (0/5 score,7 hits)

Ancestors of Christ - Eleazar - Matthan
Michelangelo
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Posted by admin (0/5 score,17 hits)

Isenheim Altarpiece second view
Grunewald, Matthias
(0/5 score,17 hits)
Posted by admin (0/5 score,3 hits)

The Crucifixion
Greco, El
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Posted by admin (0/5 score,11 hits)

The Brazen Serpent Detail 2
Michelangelo
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Posted by admin (0/5 score,3 hits)

Funerary Monument to Sir John Hawkwood
Uccello, Paolo
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Posted by admin (0/5 score,17 hits)

Adoration of the Holy Wood detail 1
Piero della Francesca
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Posted by admin (0/5 score,11 hits)

Temptation of St Anthony central panel of the triptych
Bosch, Hieronymus
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Posted by admin (0/5 score,7 hits)

Laoko n
Greco, El
(0/5 score,7 hits)
Posted by admin (0/5 score,6 hits)

Bronze Nudes 2
Michelangelo
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Posted by admin (0/5 score,4 hits)

The Temptation of Christ detail 4
Botticelli, Sandro
(0/5 score,4 hits)
Posted by admin (0/5 score,4 hits)

The Penance of St. Jerome
Piero della Francesca
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Posted by admin (0/5 score,3 hits)

Mount Sinai
Greco, El
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Baroque and Rococo

Among the greatest painters of the Baroque are Caravaggio, Rembrandt, Rubens, Velazquez and Vermeer. Caravaggio is an heir of the humanist painting of the Renaissance. His realistic approach to the human figure, painted directly from life and dramatically spotlit against a dark background, shocked his contemporaries and opened a new chapter in the history of painting. Baroque painting often dramatizes scenes using light effects; this can be seen in works by Rembrandt, Vermeer, Le Nain and La Tour.

Rococo followed as a decadent sub-genre of Baroque, lighter, often frivolous and erotic. The French masters Watteau, Boucher and Fragonard represent the style, as do Giovanni Battista Tiepolo and Thomas Gainsborough.

Baroque is a term loosely applied to European art from the end of the 16th century to the early 18th century, with the latter part of this period falling under the alternative stylistic designation of Late Baroque. The painting of the Baroque period is so varied that no single set of stylistic criteria can be applied to it. This is partly because the painting of Roman Catholic countries such as Italy or Spain differed both in its intent and in its sources of patronage from that of Protestant countries such as Holland or Britain, and it is partly because currents of classicism and naturalism coexisted with and sometimes even predominated over what is more narrowly defined as the High Baroque style.

The Baroque style in Italy and Spain had its origins in the lastdecades of the 16th century when the refined, courtly, and idiosyncratic style of Mannerist painting had ceased to be an effective means of artistic expression. Indeed, Mannerism's inadequacy as a vehicle for religious art was being increasingly felt in artistic circles as early as the middle of that century. To counter the inroads made by the Reformation, the Roman Catholic Church after the Council of Trent (1545–63) adopted an overtly propagandistic stance in which painting and the other arts were intended to serve as a means of extending and stimulating the public's faith in the church and its doctrines. The church thus adopted a conscious artistic program, the products of which would make an overtly emotional and sensory appeal to the faithful. The Baroque style of painting that evolved from this program was paradoxically both sensuous and spiritual; while naturalistic treatment rendered the painted religious image more readily comprehensible to the average churchgoer, dramatic and illusory effects were used to stimulate piety and devotion. This appeal to the senses manifested itself in a style that above all emphasized movement and emotion. The stable, pyramidal compositionsand the clear, well-defined pictorial space that were characteristic of Renaissance paintings gave way in the Baroque to complex compositions surging along diagonal lines. The Baroque vision of the world is basically dynamic and dramatic; throngs of figures possessing a superabundant vitality energize the painted scene by meansof their expressive gestures and movements. These figures are depicted with the utmost vividness and richness through the use of rich colours, dramatic effects of light and shade, and lavish use of highlights. The ceilings of Baroque churches thus dissolved in painted scenes that presented convincing views of the saints and angels to the observer and directed him through his senses to heavenly concerns.

Posted by admin (0/5 score,3 hits)

The Embarkation for Cythera
Watteau, Jean-Antoine
Posted by admin (0/5 score,3 hits)

Two Cousins
Watteau, Jean-Antoine
Posted by admin (0/5 score,0 hits)

The Swing of Pulcinella
Tiepolo, Giovanni Domenico
Posted by admin (0/5 score,5 hits)

The Buffoon Calabazas 2
Velazquez, Diego
Posted by admin (0/5 score,2 hits)

A Lady at the Virginals with a Gentleman
Vermeer, Jan
Posted by admin (4/5 score,3 hits)

The Annunciation
Caravaggio
Posted by admin (0/5 score,3 hits)

Pleasures of the Ball
Watteau, Jean-Antoine
Posted by admin (0/5 score,2 hits)

St John the Baptist 1
Caravaggio
Posted by admin (0/5 score,5 hits)

The Forest
Boucher, François
Posted by admin (0/5 score,7 hits)

The Artist and His First Wife Isabella Brant in the Honeys
Rubens, Pieter Paul
Posted by admin (0/5 score,10 hits)

Don Juan Mateos
Velazquez, Diego
Posted by admin (0/5 score,3 hits)

Portrait of Jan Gaspar Gevartius
Rubens, Pieter Paul
Posted by admin (0/5 score,6 hits)

Salome with the Head of St John the Baptist 1
Caravaggio
Posted by admin (0/5 score,5 hits)

Mary Countess of Howe
Gainsborough, Thomas
Posted by admin (0/5 score,2 hits)

Christ at Simon the Pharisee
Rubens, Pieter Paul

Collection of European Posters and Religious Illustrations

At the end of the 19th century, art moved out of the museums and onto the streets, appearing as posters, affiches and hand bills. Jules Cheret, Albert Guilaume, Lucien Lefevre and, of course, Toulouse Lautrec are all here.
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European Paintings
(0/5 score,5 hits)

European Paintings
(0/5 score,3 hits)

Religious Illustrations
(0/5 score,0 hits)

European Posters
(0/5 score,10 hits)

Religious Illustrations
(0/5 score,5 hits)

European Paintings
(0/5 score,10 hits)

Religious Illustrations
(0/5 score,2 hits)

European Posters
(0/5 score,4 hits)

European Posters
(0/5 score,3 hits)

Religious Illustrations
(0/5 score,6 hits)

European Paintings
(0/5 score,13 hits)

European Paintings
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