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Michelangelo Buonarroti
(1,568 words)
[German Version] (in full Michelagn[i]olo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni; Mar 3, 1474, Caprese – Feb 18, 1564, Rome), Italian sculptor, painter, architect, and poet, the most important artist of the High Renaissance (III) and pioneer of Mannerism. In 1488 Michelangelo was apprenticed to Domenico Ghirlandaio in Florence. Intensive study of classical sculpture, through access to the collection of the Medici in the garden of San Marco, made possible …
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Ribera, José de
(165 words)
[German Version] (
Lo Spagnoletto; baptized Feb 17, 1591, Játiva, Valencia – Sep 3, 1652, Naples), Spanish painter, graphic artist, and etcher. After periods of residence in Parma (1611) and Rome (1613–1616), Ribera settled permanently in Naples from 1616; he soon came to be the city’s leading painter. Ribera’s realistic chiaroscuro, following Caravaggio, is characteristic (
…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Titian
(422 words)
[German Version] (Tiziano Vecellio; 1488–1490, Pieve di Cadore – Aug 27, 1576, Venice), Italian painter, outstanding master of the Venetian school of painting. Sent to Venice by his father around 1500, Titian was trained by G. Bellini (among others). After some initial independent works (e.g.
Sacred and Profane Love, c. 1515), his
Assumption of the Virgin (1516–1518) and the so-called
Pesaro Madonna (1519–1526) for Sta. Maria dei Frari and the
Death of St. Peter Martyr (1526–1530, destroyed in 1867) were the most innovative altarpieces of his early creative period. After stays in Ferrara (1516) and Mantua (1519), Titian simultaneously provided the courts of Este and Gonzaga with mythological paintings (for the Camerino of Alfonso I d’Este, 1518–…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Masaccio
(230 words)
[German Version] (Tommaso di Ser Giovanni di Simoe Cassai; Dec 21, 1401, San Giovanni Val d'Arno – Jun, 1428, Rome), Italian painter and founder of the early Renaissance (III). He is known to have been in Florence as early as 1418; he was artistically active there from 1424, mostly in collaboration with Masolino (1383–1447). In Santa Maria Novella, Florence, Masaccio painted the Trinity fresco (probably c. 1427), presenting the holy Trinity with John and Mary, unique in Italian painting, illusioni…
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Religion Past and Present
Tintoretto
(167 words)
[German Version] ( Jacopo Robusti; 1519, Venice – May 31, 1594, Venice), painter and draughtsman, considered the consummate representative of Venetian Mannerism. He spent almost his entire lifetime in Venice, doing much of his extensive work in the service of the
scuole, charitable confraternities (Venice). Following his artistic breakthrough with his
Miracle of the Slave, painted 1547/1548 for the Scuola Grande di S. Marco, after 1564 Tintoretto devoted himself primarily to decorating the Scuola di S. Rocco (
Last Supper; see Jesus Christ, fig. 10). By 1588 he had provided more than 60…
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Religion Past and Present
Mantegna, Andrea
(308 words)
[German Version] (1430/1431, Isola di Carturo, modern province of Padua – Sep 13, 1506, Mantua), one of the most important Italian painters and copper engravers of the 15th century. After completing his training under Francesco Squarzione (1442–1448), Mantegna worked independently in Padua, where he provided the decoration for the Ovetari Chapel in the Eremitani Church (1448–1457). From 1460 onward, as the court painter of the Gonzagas in Mantua, he not only produced religious paintings but also n…
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Religion Past and Present
Veronese, Paolo
(181 words)
[German Version] (Caliari; 1528. Verona – Apr 18, 1588, Venice), one of the major representatives of 16th-century Venetian painting. He moved to Venice in 1553; his paintings produced there beginning in 1555 included several cycles for San Sebastiano (Esther cycle, 1555/1556). Impressed by the works of Michelangelo Buonarroti that he studied in Rome in 1560, in 1561 he completed the illusionistic frescoes of the Villa Maser, which opened the pictori…
Source:
Religion Past and Present
Renaissance
(9,034 words)
[German Version]
I. Concept The French term “Renaissance,” which was also borrowed by German and English, belongs to the large group of organic metaphors applied to historical occurrences. Used from the 19th century in sole reference to animal/human life and understood in the sense of “rebirth,” it is assigned in recent research (since Jost Trier) more appropriately to the botanical sphere and explained as “renewed growth,” i.e. as a renewed sprouting of shoots ¶ from felled trees and bushes. Pre-Christian Latin already employed
renasci (from
nasci, “to be born, to become, to arise”) both for the renewed sprouting of plants (as early as Cato,
De agricultura, 54.3) and for the reappearance of other natural phenomena or even for historical occurrences. Christianity seized upon this conception and expanded it by affirming the regeneration that cannot occur in natural life (e.g. Tit 3:5: …
Source:
Religion Past and Present