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These sentences summarize the distinctive features of Baroque style. Decide which of them are true or false
5. Retell the text according to the plan: 1. Italian Baroque. 2. Flemish Baroque. 3. Dutch Baroque. Unit7 Baroque and rococo
1. Discuss the following questions: · What famous English artists and sculptures do you know? · Who designed St. Paul’s Cathedral? When was it built? · What was the political situation in England of that times? · When was the Royal Academy of Arts founded? · What Spanish artists do you know?
Look at the chart and describe the difference between in Baroque style in these countries. Add your own examples of artists, sculptors and architects and their artworks.
Read and translate the text. English Baroque While in literature the 1600s was an era of extraordinary creativity (Shakespeare, Donne, Milton), the visual arts in England lagged far behind. Since religious art was forbidden in Puritan churches and the taste for mythological subjects never caught on, English art was limited almost exclusively to portraits. Hogarth. William Hogarth invented a new genre – the comic strip – or a sequence of anecdotal pictures. He could also be considered the first political cartoonist. He drew his targets from the whole range of society, satirizing with equal aplomb the idle aristocracy, drunken urban working class (a first in visual art), and corrupt politicians. Gainsborough. Gainsborough worshiped van Dyck learned from the master how to elongate figures to make them seem regal and set them in charmingly negligent poses to make them seem alive. Gainsborough refreshed British art with his loving portrayal of landscape backgrounds. He painted landscapes for his own pleasure, constructing miniature scenes in his studio of broccoli, sponges, and moss to simulate unspoiled nature. In «Mrs. Richard Brinsley Sheridan» the natural beauty of both the landscape and subject harmonize perfectly. The framing tree at right arcs into the painting to lead the eye back, while the curves of clouds and mid–ground tree, skirt bring the focus back to the sitter's face. This Baroque swirl of encircling eye movement repeats the oval of her face. The leafy look of Gainsborough's paintings helped establish the concept, that nature was a worthwhile subject for art. Reynolds. Reynolds was a champion of idealizing reality. He so idolized such masters as Raphael, Michelangelo, Rubens, and Rembrandt he even painted his self–portrait costumed as the latter. His portraits succeeded in spite of his pedantic self. Ironically, in his best portraits Reynolds ignored his own rules. Instead of idealizing what he termed «deficiencies and deformities» he relied on an intimate, direct style to capture the sitter's personality.
Spanish Baroque Spain's major gift to world art was Diego Velazquez. Extraordinarily precocious, while still in his teens he painted pictures demonstrating total technical mastery. Velazquez's royal portraits were masterpieces of visual realism, but opposite of linear precision. No outlines are visible in his portraits; he created forms with fluid brushstrokes and by applying spots of light and color, a precursor of Impressionism. Velazquez differed from most Baroque artists in the simplicity and earthiness of his work. He never succumbed to the pompous style of strewing allegorical symbols and Classical bric-a-brac about his paintings. Instead, he depicted the world as it appeared to his eyes. His early paintings portrayed even holy or mythological figures as real people, drawn against a neutral background. He presented his subjects with dignity and, in all cases, factuality. His approach humanized the stiff, formal court portrait tradition by setting models in more natural poses without fussy accessories. Although Velazquez is considered a master of realism, he achieved his effects with loose brushstrokes that, when scrutinized at close range, seem to melt into blurred daubs of paint.
French Baroque In the seventeenth century, France was the most powerful country in Europe, and Louis XIV tapped the finest talents to glorify his monarchy with a palace of unparalleled splendor. Poussin. The most famous French painter of the seventeenth century, Nicolas Poussin worked not in France but in Rome. He based his paintings on ancient Roman myths, history, and Greek sculpture. The widespread influence of Poussin's work revived this ancient style, which became the dominant artistic influence for the next 200 years. Left to his own devices, Poussin chose to paint in what he called «la manieramagnifica» (the grand manner) – is that the subject and the narrative should be grandiose, such as battles, heroic actions, and religious themes. The pinnacle of Baroque opulence was the magnificent chateau of Versailles, transformed from a modest hunting lodge to the largest palace in the world. Versailles' hundreds of rooms were adorned with crystal chandeliers, multicolored marble, solid–silver furniture, and crimson velvet hangings embroidered in gold. The king himself, covered in gold, diamonds, and feathers, received important guests seated on a nine–foot, canopied silver throne. His royal rising (lever) and retiring (coucher) were attended by flocks of courtiers in formal rituals as important to the court as the rising and setting of the sun.
Rococo Rococo was born in Paris, where it coincided with the reign of Louis XV (1723–74). By 1760, it was considered outmoded in France but was in vogue until the end of the century for luxurious castles and churches throughout Germany, Austria, and Central Europe. Rococo was primarily a form of interior decoration, the name deriving from the «rocaille» motif of shellwork and pebbles ornamenting grottoes and fountains. In some ways, the Rococo style looks like the word itself. The decorative arts were the special display ground for its curvilinear, delicate ornamentation. Floors were inlaid in complicated patterns of wood veneer, furniture was richly carved and decorated with Gobelin upholstery and inlays of ivory and tortoiseshell. Clothing, silverwork, and china were also overwrought with curlicues as well as flowers, shells, and leaves. Even carriage designers avoided straight lines for carved swirls and scrolls, and horses wore immense plumes and bejeweled harnesses. Rococo art was as decorative and nonfunctional as the effete aristocracy that embraced it. In Watteau's «Pilgrimage to Cythera» romantic couples frolic on an enchanted isle of eternal youth and love. Boucher's style was artificial in the extreme; he refused to paint from life, saying nature was «too green and badly lit». His pretty pink nudes in seductive poses earned him great success among the decadent aristocracy.
idle – workers who are idle have no work. precursor – something that exists before something else, and is related to it or influences its development. daub – to spread a wet substance such as paint on a surface in acareless way. pinnacle – the most successful or exciting part of someone’s life. curlicue – a curl or twist used as a decoration.
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