Transcript Slide 1

Byzantine “perspective”—reverse perspective
•reverse perspective: parallel lines appear to diverge
instead of converge
•the Byzantines did not conceive of pictorial space the way
the Romans had—as a view of the natural world seen
through a “window”
•in the Byzantine aesthetic theory, invisible rays of sight
joined the eye and image so that the pictorial space extended
forward from the picture plane to the eye of the beholder and
included the real space between them
Empress Theodora and Her Attendants c. 547
mosaic on the south wall of the apse, Church of San Vitale, Ravenna Italy
Medieval “Perspective”
How artists tried to create pictorial space or a sense of depth before
Filippo Brunelleschi “rediscovered” linear perspective in about 1420.
•pictorial elements are stacked on top of each other to create a
sense of space or depth—look for rows of people or angels
•thrones are often used to occupy space and create depth—
angels and saints are often set up in rows alongside the throne’s
sides
•rocks or rocky hills angle across the pictorial frame and become
slightly smaller to create sense of depth
Feeding the Pigs with Acorns
c. 1180
Illumination on parchment
Koninklijke Bibliotheek, Den Haag
Page with Christ in Majesty
Book of Mark, Godescalc Evangelistary
781-783
ink, gold, colors on vellum
Note the influence of a Roman visual
vocabulary on this representation of Christ in
Majesty.
What is Christ doing?
Why does the wall behind Christ represent?
On what is Christ sitting?
What is Christ holding--probably?
What does the “strange” wide-eyed stare
signify?
Multiplication of the
Loaves from
Magdeburg Ivories
962-968
Death of the
Virgin
a detail from
Duccio’s
Maesta
Altarpiece
1308-1311
Siena
Duccio
Maesta Altarpiece
1308-1311
Siena
The Visitation
Giotto di Bondone
Arena Chapel
Padua, Italy
for the Scrovegni
family
c. 1304-1313
The Kiss of Judas
Giotto di Bondone
Arena Chapel
Padua, Italy
for the Scrovegni
family
c. 1304-1313
Lamentation
(The Pieta)
Giotto di Bondone
Arena Chapel
Padua, Italy
for the Scrovegni
family
c. 1304-1313
February
Limbourg Brothers
(Paul, Herman, Jean)
Tres Riches Heures
1413-1416
December
Limbourg Brothers
(Paul, Herman, Jean)
Tres Riches Heures
1413-1416
Mary of Burgundy Painter
page with Mary at her Devotions
Hours of Mary of Burgundy
1482
Hour of Cowdust
Punjab Hills, India
Mughal period c.1790
gouache on paper
Panoramic Perspective
•No such comprehensive panorama of the natural world and
its human inhabitants is know to us from the entire previous
history of art.
•No single point of view (he is a medieval painter)—the artist
instead wants to show the viewer as much as he possibly
can of the landscape.
•To understand this view, what is necessary?
detail: Effects of Good Government in the Countryside
Ambrogio Lorenzetti
Allegory of the Good Government
1338-40
fresco Palazzo Pubblico, Siena
Mathematical Perspective
Linear Perspective
One-Point Perspective
•Humanist belief that “man is the measure of all things” altered the
perspective used in works of art.
•A man’s eye view began to replace a God’s eye view.
•First demonstrated by Filippo Brunelleschi about 1420
•A mathematical system for representing three-dimensional objects and
space on a two-dimensional surface by means of intersecting lines that
are drawn vertically and horizontally and that radiate from one point
(one-point perspective), two points (two-point perspective), or
several points on a horizon line as perceived by a viewer imagined in an
arbitrarily fixed position.
•The picture’s surface is understood as a flat plane that intersects at a
right angle with the viewer’s field of vision.
Paolo Uccello
Bernardino della Ciarda Thrown Off His Horse
1450s
Tempera on wood, 182 x 220 cm
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence
Paolo Uccello
Miracle of the Desecrated Host (Scene 2)
1465-69
Panel, 43 x 58 cm
Paolo Uccello
St. George and the Dragon
c. 1456
Oil on canvas, 57 x 73 cm
National Gallery, London
Paolo Uccello
The Hunt in the Forest
1460s
Tempera on wood, 65 x 165 cm
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford
Paolo Uccello
Funerary Monument to Sir John
Hawkwood
1436
Fresco,
Duomo, Florence
Donatello
Herod's
Banquet
1427
bronze
Baptistery,Siena
Trinity
1425-28
Fresco, 667 x 317 cm
Santa Maria Novella, Florence
Intuitive Perspective
and
Atmospheric Perspective
Intuitive perspective is when an artist makes objects in the
background smaller than objects in the foreground to visually
signal that these objects are further away.
Atmospheric perspective is when an artist softens or blurs the
edges of objects in the extreme distance to imitate
atmospheric effects—moisture in the air. The artist will also
give these same objects a bluish tinge.
Arrival in Basel (scene #2)
from the Martyrdom of St. Ursula
reliquary
Hans Memling
1489
The Corn Harvest (August) Pieter Bruegel the Elder 1565
Hunters in the Snow (January) Pieter Bruegel the Elder c. 1565