ONLINE ART HISTORY COURSE
Italian Art and Architecture: Giotto to Michelangelo
Dates: May 11 – June 17, 2020
Time: Mondays & Wednesdays 2:00pm – 3:15pm EDT
Contact Hours: 15 Hours
Location: LIVE INTERACTIVE ON-LINE ART HISTORY COURSE
Cost: $375.00/person | $187.50/additional family member
– PRORATED COST FOR LATE REGISTRATION –
ONLINE ART HISTORY COURSE
Italian Art and Architecture: Giotto to Michelangelo
Course Description:
This course will explore the development of art and architecture in Italy from the late Middle Ages through the High Renaissance. Through an in-depth analysis of the art, architecture and history of these periods, we shall develop an understanding of Italy’s role in the overall development of Western civilization. Particular emphasis will be given to those Italian cities that exhibit particularly well-integrated conceptions of painting, sculpture, and architecture.
Course Objectives:
• To learn to appreciate the rich and influential aspects of Italian Renaissance art and architecture.
• To bring a historical period to life through a “hands on” approach to the monuments and works produced during this specific period known as the Renaissance
• To develop the fundamental skills of art historical analysis that include formal analysis and iconographic interpretation
• To develop an ability to interact in a personal and intimate manner with works of art and their surroundings
Examination and assignments:
OPTIONAL FINAL EXAM – The format of the exams will consist in slide identifications with short answer questions, multiple choice questions, term definitions and short essay analyses.
Optional Textbook:
John T. Paoletti and Gary M. Radke, Art in Renaissance Italy, 4th Edition. All readings should be done in advance of each week’s class.
Complete syllabus will be provided upon registration.
WEEK 1 – FRANCISCAN ART AND PHILOSOPHY
The first lecture this week examines the history, architecture and decoration of great shrine to St. Francis in Assisi that was decorated by a veritable all-star team of late-13th/early-14th-century artists such as Cimabue, Simone Martini, Pietro Lorenzetti and perhaps even Giotto.
The second lecture examines the church of Santa Croce in Florence, the largest Franciscan church in the world. Most famous for its celebrity tombs, including the likes of Michelangelo, Galileo and Machiavelli, this Gothic church also contains one of the most important Medieval fresco cycles by the great master Giotto and his followers.
– Monday May 11: FRANCISCAN PHILOSOPHY AND THE BASILICA OF ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI
– Wednesday May 13: THE BASILICA OF SANTA CROCE, FLORENCE
WEEK 2 – ART IN ARCHITECTURE IN MEDIEVAL SIENA, CITY OF THE VIRGIN MARY
In the first half of the 14th century, the city of Siena was Florence’s main political, economic and artistic rival. Artists such as Duccio, Simone Martini and Ambrogio Lorenzetti were members of one of Europe’s most important school of painting. This lecture will examine the religious art and architecture in Siena in order to understand the city’s unique beauty and rivalry with Florence. We shall discuss the striking Gothic cathedral of Siena and examine the various artistic works which adorned it.
The second lecture this week examines the civic architecture of Siena as embodied in the city’s most important civic structure – the Palazzo Pubblico. This late 13th-century building still serves as Siena’s town hall and preserves some of the most important murals of the 14th Century. Through an in-depth analysis of these murals, beginning with Simone Martini’s Maestà in the former room of the “Great Council” and then the Allegory of Good and Bad Government by Ambrogio Lorenzetti in the “Room of the Nine”- Siena’s medieval Oval Office – we will come to understand that the governing principles of an effective democracy transcend time.
– Monday May 18: RELIGIOUS ART AND ARCHITECTURE, SIENA
– Wednesday May 20: CIVIC ART AND ARCHITECTURE IN SIENA
WEEK 3 – THE DAWN OF RENAISSANCE PAINTING:GIOTTO AND THE SCROVEGNI CHAPEL, PADUA
Giotto’s 14th-century fresco cycle in the Scrovegni Chapel in Padua, Italy, is perhaps the seminal motion picture in Western Art. The artist transformed the iconic, sacred subjects of his contemporary painting world into a very human story- or what I like to call the “visual vernacular”. This lecture will examine a surprisingly modern aspect of Giotto’s work, that is the cinematic quality. To put it simply, the paintings in the chapel read like a motion picture or a film, in which humanity is the star. Giotto’s mise en scène is full of expressive character types, landscapes, colour and visual arrangements. The sequential arrangement and juxtaposition of scenes, instead, produce a visual narrative of which most modern film directors would be envious. In a purely visual medium, Giotto is able to evoke sounds and smells, emotions and expectations, humor and terror.
– Monday May 25: THE PAINTINGS OF THE SCROVEGNI CHAPEL PART I
– Wednesday May 27: THE PAINTINGS OF THE SCROVEGNI CHAPEL PART II
WEEK 4 – MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE PAINTING IN FLORENCE
The Uffizi Gallery houses the world’s most important collection of medieval and Renaissance Italian paintings, with major works by artists such as Giotto, Simone Martini, Piero della Francesca, Fra Lippo Lippi, Botticelli, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael, and Caravaggio. This lecture will examine the evolution of painting during from the early-14th to the mid-17th centuries as reflected in the paintings housed in this great museum.
Monday June 1 – MASTERPIECES OF THE UFFIZI GALLERY PART I
Wednesday June 3 – MASTERPIECES OF THE UFFIZI GALLERY PART II
WEEK 5: RENAISSANCE PAINTING IN VENICE
Venice was the longest lasting Republic in history. The city’s privileged position as cultural and economic bridge between the Eastern and Western Christian world contribute to the uniqueness of Venice. The art and architecture in Venice clearly display this combination of Islamic, Byzantine, and Classical influences. Artists such as Bellini, Giorgione, Titian and Tintoretto would make Venetian painting perhaps the only school to rival that of the Central Italian Renaissance. We will not only examine the buildings and paintings of Venice, but also the history of perhaps the most singular city in the world.
– June 8: GENTILE AND Giovanni Bellini, CARPACCIO, GIORGIONE
– June 10: TITIAN, TINTORETTO AND PAOLO VERONESE
WEEK 6 – THE RE-BIRTH OF ROME UNDER POPE JULIUS II
When Giuliano Della Rovere was elected Pope in 1503, he took the name of the great Roman dictator Julius Caesar. This gesture was perfectly in tune with the new Pope’s desire to restore ancient imperial glory to the city of Rome by calling all the great artists of Europe to rebuild the city – including Bramante, Raphael and Michelangelo. This lecture will examine the artistic legacy of the Pope who has been defined as the most fortunate patron in history in having such an extraordinary stable of artists working for him in early 16th-century Rome.
– Monday June 15: THE BASILICA OF ST. Peter, THE SISTINE CHAPEL, THE RAPHAEL ROOMS PART I
– Wednesday June 17: THE BASILICA OF ST. Peter, THE SISTINE CHAPEL, THE RAPHAEL ROOMS PART II
WEEK 7 – OPTIONAL FINAL EXAM
– Monday June 22: FINAL EXAM