Tags
Language
Tags
April 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
31 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 1 2 3 4

Art of the Northern Renaissance

Posted By: FenixN
Art of the Northern Renaissance

Art of the Northern Renaissance
36xDVDRip | AVI / XviD, 1550 kb/s | 720x544 | ~36x30 min | English: MP3, 128 kb/s (2 ch) | 10.0 GB

What does is it mean to see a painting—and is seeing it the same thing as understanding it? Hieronymus Bosch's monumental Garden of Earthly Delights is instantly recognizable to most lovers of Renaissance art, and as Professor Catherine B. Scallen explains, it has been admired, looked on with shock, and puzzled over for 500 years. In its own time it was copied and even made into tapestries. It has been owned by a deeply devout Catholic king of Spain—and in the 1900s was cited by various scholars as representing the lost golden age of humanity, symbolizing the coded language of the alchemist, or even proving its creator's belief in sexual license. In the turbulent 1960s its images were common in dormitory rooms, delighting students eager to accept its joyful, frolicking nudes in their fantasy landscape as a proclamation of freedom and self-indulgence. Although critics and scholars differ on what Hieronymus Bosch depicted in the Garden of Earthly Delights, it was definitely not a paean to self-indulgence or drugs. The work is one of a long line of fantastic images left by an artist who was known for moralizing on the consequences of sin and folly. Bosch's world-view clearly intrigued his contemporaries, whether or not they understood his art better than we do. You will meet many such unique figures throughout the 36 lectures of The Art of the Northern Renaissance, as Professor Scallen guides you through 200 years of remarkable art and artists. Although the term "the Renaissance" is most commonly associated with an era of artistic bounty in Italy, the massive cultural transformations that were remaking the world were having as significant an impact on art throughout northern Europe as well, and both traditions were highly admired at the time, with significant contact between the two. Italian artists were aware of Northern innovations. Northern artists increasingly traveled to Italy where they were exposed to the art of antiquity as well as the art of Renaissance Italy.

1. What Was the Northern Renaissance?
2. The Burgundian Netherlands
3. Panel Painters from c. 1400–c. 1435
4. Van Eycks and the Ghent Altarpiece
5. Jan van Eyck's Religious Paintings
6. Jan van Eyck's Portraits
7. Rogier—Religious Paintings
8. Rogier—Devotional Paintings and Portraits
9. Petrus Christus—Heir to Van Eyck and Rogier
10. Hugo van der Goes
11. Dieric Bouts and Geertgen tot Sint Jans
12. Hans Memling
13. Practices in the Painter's Workshop
14. The Veronica Master, Lochner, Schongauer
15. 15th-Century Prints
16. Albrecht Dürer's Early Career
17. Albrecht Dürer's Mature Career
18. Albrecht Dürer's Later Career
19. Lucas Cranach as a Painter
20. Grünewald and Altdorfer
21. 16th-Century German Woodcuts
22. 16th-Century Intaglio Prints
23. Holbein the Younger in Switzerland
24. Holbein the Younger in England, 1532–1543
25. David and the Master of Mary of Burgundy
26. Hieronymus Bosch
27. Two Bosch Triptychs
28. Lucas van Leyden
29. Patinir, Massys, and Van Cleve
30. The Rise of Antwerp
31. Internationalism and Northern Artists
32. Maarten van Heemskerck
33. Pieter Bruegel—Religious Subjects
34. Pieter Bruegel—Folk Culture and Traditions
35. Pieter Bruegel—The Land and the Peasant
36. Iconoclasm, War, and Signs of Revival


screenshot
Art of the Northern Renaissance

Art of the Northern Renaissance

Art of the Northern Renaissance

Art of the Northern Renaissance

Art of the Northern Renaissance

Welcome to the best movies collection (English, German, French language), best software, best eLearning video and many-many more: LINK
Do not forget to check my blog! Updated regularly!