Tuesday, March 17, 2020
Artistic Innovations of Renaissance Florentine Painters essays
Artistic Innovations of Renaissance Florentine Painters essays    Artistic Innovations of Renaissance Florentine Painters     	During the Renaissance, many new, different styles of painting were developed.       Many of these techniques were perfected by Florentine painters.  Some of these styles     techniques include perspective, life-like human forms, realistic looking objects and     chiaroscuro.  These developments began to form in the early Quattrocento and were slowly     perfected by a long flow of artists.  Their influences included new scientific discoveries as       well as new outlooks on religion, life and visual perception of the world.       	Perspective was perhaps one of the most significant methods developed and also the     one with the most impact.  It is still widely used today.  Perspective is a method which is     used to make a three-dimensional space or object appear three-dimensional on a     two-dimensional space.  It allows objects to appear closer or further away and gives them     depth.  This effect can be achieved by making all of the lines in a painting go towards a     vanishing point on a horizon line.  Artists also found that while using a horizon  line and     vanishing point, if you made one object in the painting which was identical to another     object, but smaller, the objects would appear to be at different distances from the     viewer.(see fig.1)  During the early Renaissance, as humanism focused attention on man     and human perspective, the viewer assumes the active role.  Now, instead of projecting     outward, space recedes from the viewers eye into the picture plane.1     	The  first person to begin using the perspective technique was an artist named Giotto      di Bondone (1267-1337).  In an astonishingly short amount of time, Giotto revolutionized        the art of Florence.  He is considered by many to be the true father of Renaissance painting.       Since Giotto was from a time before the Renaissance actually began, his style consists of      some methods which later...     
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