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Don Quixote
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Topic: Favorite Renaissance Artist Posted: 17-Apr-2012 at 03:19 |
Raphael, "Madonna"
Edited by Don Quixote - 17-Apr-2012 at 03:20
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Don Quixote
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Posted: 14-Apr-2012 at 15:47 |
I have quite a few, actually. I can start with Raphael:
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Quetzalcoatl
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Posted: 13-Oct-2004 at 18:47 |
The beauty of the view of the Delft, is its aura, something you can't explain but just feel, the feeling is good for me so it is a great work.
Edited by Quetzalcoatl
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JanusRook
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Posted: 13-Oct-2004 at 00:16 |
Art of Painting is very good, although on a more personal note I'm not such a big fan of view of delft. Sorry but landscapes just don't appeal to me. I need something less.....how should I put this.....airy, ethereal, open to interpretation. I like to see things as they are or as someone wants them to be seen. Sorry if I confused you like art you just can't put it into words.
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Economic Communist, Political Progressive, Social Conservative.
Unless otherwise noted source is wiki.
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Quetzalcoatl
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Posted: 11-Oct-2004 at 18:19 |
Preach it brother! What's your favorite painting by him? |
"View of the Delft" is fascinating and the "Art of Painting".
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JanusRook
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Posted: 11-Oct-2004 at 17:57 |
Vermeer, the best.
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Preach it brother! What's your favorite painting by him?
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Economic Communist, Political Progressive, Social Conservative.
Unless otherwise noted source is wiki.
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Quetzalcoatl
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Posted: 10-Oct-2004 at 20:02 |
Vermeer, the best.
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Guests
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Posted: 10-Oct-2004 at 12:33 |
i think Leonardo da Vinci, Michel Angelo and Giovanni Bellini...
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Evildoer
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Posted: 07-Oct-2004 at 19:17 |
I don't like nudity in art. I like drawing the flowing folds of cloth instead!
Early Renaissance artists are good for me as well.
Edited by Evildoer
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Colchis
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Posted: 06-Oct-2004 at 22:17 |
Originally posted by Catt
Yes, Colchis, because of my sexual preference.. i am
attracted to females. Their bodies are wonderful but i have to say that
mens bodies are a work of art, superior if i may. Maybe a little harsh
of me. |
I find good examples of both the male and the female body very
aesthetic but after an art education I must admit that drawing the male
figure is actually much harder, even for males! A man's body is much
more detailed, especially those of Michelangelo was fond of painting.
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cattus
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Posted: 06-Oct-2004 at 22:06 |
Yes, Colchis, because of my sexual preference.. i am attracted to females. Their bodies are wonderful but i have to say that mens bodies are a work of art, superior if i may. Maybe a little harsh of me.
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Colchis
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Posted: 06-Oct-2004 at 20:48 |
Originally posted by Cornellia
Evildoer, Michelangelo didn't paint the
aristocrats, he painted the average working individual which is why his
men and women are beefier and more muscular than in other paintings. |
Also he was an admirer of the male figure, and men in general, and he
apparently didn't find the female figure all that interesting; hence
all the masculinity. It is known
that for certain female figures at least he used males only to give
them a little more curve later on. He admired the classic figures of
ancient Greece and Rome and the reason why he shows his figures in
distressed and agonising situations is a. because he was a very tragic
figure himself and b. because that's when the human figure looks its
most dramatic.
I'm more of a Northern Renaissance person myself and the first names
that come to my mind are Jan van Eyck and Hugo van der Goes and Holbein
the Younger. Rafaello and Da Vinci are, of course, obvious giants.
Edited by Colchis
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Cornellia
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Posted: 06-Oct-2004 at 19:58 |
Evildoer, Michelangelo didn't paint the aristocrats, he painted the average working individual which is why his men and women are beefier and more muscular than in other paintings.
These models were people who worked hard at physical labor for a living.
The Renaissance, for me anyway, marks a time when artists moved away from the stylized and began to experiment and find joy in the human condition. Instead of just portraying an event or a person, they found the soul.
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Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas
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Evildoer
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Posted: 06-Oct-2004 at 15:41 |
Not the height I would say... Art continues to live on without diminishing...
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Genghis
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Posted: 03-Oct-2004 at 21:32 |
I think the Renaissance was the height of artistic thought. I'm no art fan, but when I'm in Europe, I love seeing Renaissance artwork.
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Evildoer
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Posted: 13-Sep-2004 at 09:42 |
It was Rafael all right. The painting was called "School of Athens".
I like Massaccio, Rafael and a number of Dutch masters.
The reason I dislike Michelangelo is that all his humans are unrealisitically muscular, and there is too much nudity in Sistine "Chaple" ceiling!!!!
Edited by Evildoer
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demon
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Posted: 13-Sep-2004 at 08:36 |
RAfael or that guy who drew plato's school....I don't remember his name....help!!
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Grrr..
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Landsknecht_Doppelsoldner
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Posted: 13-Sep-2004 at 08:22 |
There are so many great artists to choose from!
I'll have to go with ALBRECHT DURER, the master of the woodcut.
I'm also a fan of URS GRAF, the Swiss soldier who did countless illustrations of 16th century battles, based on his own experiences. His sketches and other pieces of art are almost like "Renaissance Combat Photography".
TITIAN is another favorite of mine, especially because his portrait of Ippolito de Medici looks just like me! It's really creepy...
I like DA VINCI more for his inventions than his art, although he clearly excelled at both.
Hans Holbein was great too.
Finally, the bizarre quality of EL GRECO cannot be denied--good stuff.
Peace,
David Black Mastro
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"Who despises me and my praiseworthy craft,
I'll hit on the head that it resounds in his heart."
--Augustin Staidt, of the Federfechter (German fencing guild)
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Lannes
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Posted: 08-Sep-2004 at 16:32 |
Michelangelo. His work in the Sistine Chapel was gorgeous.
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τρέφεται δέ, ὤ Σώκρατης, ψυχὴ τίνι;
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Cornellia
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Posted: 08-Sep-2004 at 07:01 |
DaVinci, definitely but a very close second is Raphael.
Though known for his religious subjects, Raphael did so much more. Here's a large number of examples
http://www.artrenewal.org/asp/database/art.asp?aid=124&p age=1&order=q
Actually, the whole site is a wonderful place to visit to view works by your favorite artist.
http://www.artrenewal.org/index.html
And a sonnet by Raphael (who is buried in the Pantheon in Rome)
Sonnet by the Artist to his Beloved by Raphael Sanzio
Sweet remembrance! Hour of bliss When we met, but now the more I mourn, as when the sailor is Star-less, distant far from shore.
Now tongue, tho' 'tis with grief, relate How love deceiv'd me of my joy; Display the unaccustom'd cheat, But praise the nymph, and thank the boy.
It was when the declining sun Beheld another sun arise; And there were actions should be done, No talking, only with the eyes.
But I tormented by the fire That burnt within, was overcome: Thus when to speak we most desire The more we find we must be dumb.
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Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas
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