¶ … Sistine Modonna and the Swing Paintings
The Swing and the Sistine Madonna are both masterpieces of their era, long lasting in both technical success and celebration of their chosen subjects. Raphael and Fragonard approach their sources with deliberate composition through color, texture, lines and shapes, creating images of powerful resonance. The Sistine Madonna tells the story of great abandonment and celebration of lavish sensuality, while the Sistine Madonna explores the religious underpinnings of the Christian church. However, despite their disparate styles and meanings, they are infused with a circular similarity in both objects, construction, and import.
M. Putscher, in conversation about the work of F.T. Vischer in 1858, notably exclaimed, "What means this period made use of to draw Raphel closer to itself, even by force!"
Conversation about this all-important painting, particularly its artistic dissection, grew with the course of art history, developing from description to explanation. While it remained in its original location until 1754, it was enjoyed with the quiet appreciation of the Piacenza.
While Vasari mentioned it, its role in the world of art was still not prevalent. Its most notable praise came with its transitory arrival to the Dresden Gallery Collection, where viewing was not only more readily experienced but more easily accepted.
While Leonardo delved into the Madonna of the Goldfinch (Uffizi) and the Madonna of the Meadow (Vienna), abandoning dark mystery for seemingly innocent play and tussle with refined compositional scheme, Raphael was experimenting with the Donni portraits, Baldassara Castiglione (c. 1515, Paris, Louvre), and A Cardinal (c. 1511, Madrid). In influence, Donatello joined Leonardo in Raphel's "sweet style," the tender gracefulness for which he is most known and of which the Vatican frescoes even in the early years made evident. Giovanni Bellini joined ranks, setting the stage for Raphael's masterpiece with an ethos of transcendent proximity, placing the heads of the Virgin and the Child more close than ever before. After a thousand and a half years, the mother and child were approachable, figures readily grasped in their holy figuration by the earliest painter successful in breaching the mortal and celestial divide; Raphael produced the Sistine Madonna.
Made famous by the tourist souvenir shops and art mongers internationally, the fruitful simplicity of Raphael's color, tone, placement, composition, and structure brought to life the holiest of holy with anchoring accessibility. Like his predecessors, Raphael brought his Madonna down to earth, making her relationship with the Child fantastically human. The work was neither empyrean nor pedantic; the structure of each figure, clear detailing restraint, and color bring emotion to the painting that idealizes them without the supra-human powers of Leonardo, but with a touch of human fallibility and sweetness even unique to the holy cherub on the bottom right. With this celebration of humanity, godly triumph, and careful brush, The Sistine Madonna (c. 1515, Dresden), builds on the early Florentine examples with exponential strength.
Michelangelo wrote in1542 that 'all that Raphael knew in his art, he had from me'.
The Sistine Madonna makes this corollary self-evident; the circular Taddei Madonna (bas-relief, c. 1504, London, Royal Academy), which he sketched, began Raphael's understanding, incorporation, and mastery of circular composition. There, the Child flows through this same fluency, throwing himself into the protective arms of his mother while at the same time staring with inquisitive content at the gold finch held by his cousin; the cycle was later ironed out in The Orleans Madonna (1506, Chantilly, Musee Conde), where the young Christ grasps the virgin's dress, her right hand upon his left foot. The bodily circle embodied there was later further cultivated with background.
The stability of The Sistine Madonna comes from a muddled, busy background that falls silent to the circles provided by the figures and curtains. The Bridgewater Madonna (1507, Edinburgh, National Gallery of Scotland, Sutherland Loan) balances the Christ's body as the Child turns his head over shoulder toward the Virgin-mother. The graceful sweep of the draperies balances and calms her stiffened neck with the same aplomb that it does in The Sistine Madonna. The curtains sweep the heavenly exterior of the painting with swathing embrace, a velvet source of motif both unique and new and equally steeped in history.
Not until the nineteenth century did the curtain garner much critical debate in the world of art history.
While some observe its previous critical neglect as a sign of observers' inability to explain the continuous circle and motif, it is obviously an extension of antiquated Christian iconography; it makes logical sense that this, to early scholars still existent...
Rococo and Neo-Classical Two styles became very popular in Europe during the 1700s. One, the Rococo style was characterized by fluidity, asymmetry, and the extremely ornate. This style would come to dominate France during the period and stretch out across Europe and into Russia. Rococo has come to mean "busy" in the modern vernacular and seem a criticism but at the time, this was just what fashionable people wanted. Homes were
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The most famous genre painting by David is undoubtedly the Death of Marat (1793) which depicts French radical Jean-Paul Marat slumped over in his bathtub while holding a letter which he obviously was writing just before being killed by Charlotte Corday. The overall narrative of this painting -- the knife/murder weapon lying on the floor, the entry wound just above Marat's heart, his right arm draped over the edge of
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In Spain, the work of Diego Rodriguez de Silva y Velazquez expressed the style of baroque art in works of oil on canvas painted by Velazquez during the period. Vermeer and Velazquez are associated with what is described as "third phase," in baroque, also referred to as the "classicistic phase." The work of Velazquez is of interest when considering the feminist perspective, because it is his work where we find
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