New Page 1

LA GRAMMATICA DI ENGLISH GRATIS IN VERSIONE MOBILE   INFORMATIVA PRIVACY

  NUOVA SEZIONE ELINGUE

 

Selettore risorse   

   

 

                                         IL Metodo  |  Grammatica  |  RISPOSTE GRAMMATICALI  |  Multiblog  |  INSEGNARE AGLI ADULTI  |  INSEGNARE AI BAMBINI  |  AudioBooks  |  RISORSE SFiziosE  |  Articoli  |  Tips  | testi pAralleli  |  VIDEO SOTTOTITOLATI
                                                                                         ESERCIZI :   Serie 1 - 2 - 3  - 4 - 5  SERVIZI:   Pronunciatore di inglese - Dizionario - Convertitore IPA/UK - IPA/US - Convertitore di valute in lire ed euro                                              

 

 

WIKIBOOKS
DISPONIBILI
?????????

ART
- Great Painters
BUSINESS&LAW
- Accounting
- Fundamentals of Law
- Marketing
- Shorthand
CARS
- Concept Cars
GAMES&SPORT
- Videogames
- The World of Sports

COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY
- Blogs
- Free Software
- Google
- My Computer

- PHP Language and Applications
- Wikipedia
- Windows Vista

EDUCATION
- Education
LITERATURE
- Masterpieces of English Literature
LINGUISTICS
- American English

- English Dictionaries
- The English Language

MEDICINE
- Medical Emergencies
- The Theory of Memory
MUSIC&DANCE
- The Beatles
- Dances
- Microphones
- Musical Notation
- Music Instruments
SCIENCE
- Batteries
- Nanotechnology
LIFESTYLE
- Cosmetics
- Diets
- Vegetarianism and Veganism
TRADITIONS
- Christmas Traditions
NATURE
- Animals

- Fruits And Vegetables



ARTICLES IN THE BOOK

  1. Agnolo Gaddi
  2. Albrecht Altdorfer
  3. Albrecht Duerer
  4. Alessandro Magnasco
  5. Alfred Sisley
  6. Aligi Sassu
  7. Ambrogio Lorenzetti
  8. Andrea del Sarto
  9. Andrea del Verrocchio
  10. Andrea Mantegna
  11. Annibale Carracci
  12. Antoine Watteau
  13. Antonello da Messina
  14. Antonio da Correggio
  15. Arnold Boecklin
  16. Balthus
  17. Benozzo Gozzoli
  18. Camille Pissarro
  19. Canaletto
  20. Caravaggio
  21. Edouard Manet
  22. Cimabue
  23. Cima da Conegliano
  24. Claude Lorrain
  25. Claude Monet
  26. Diego Velazquez
  27. Domenico Ghirlandaio
  28. Duccio
  29. Edgar Degas
  30. Edvard Munch
  31. Egon Schiele
  32. El Greco
  33. Fernand Léger
  34. Filippo Lippi
  35. Fra Angelico
  36. François Boucher
  37. Francesco Guardi
  38. Francis Bacon
  39. Francisco Goya
  40. Francisco Zurbaran
  41. Francis Picabia
  42. Frans Hals
  43. Franz Marc
  44. Friedensreich Hundertwasser
  45. Gentile da Fabriano
  46. Georges de La Tour
  47. Georges-Pierre Seurat
  48. Georges Rouault
  49. Gerard Dou
  50. Gian Lorenzo Bernini
  51. Giorgio de Chirico
  52. Giorgio Morandi
  53. Giorgione
  54. Giotto di Bondone
  55. Giovanni Bellini
  56. Giovanni Fattori
  57. Giuseppe Arcimboldo
  58. Guercino
  59. Guido Reni
  60. Gustave Courbet
  61. Gustave Moreau
  62. Gustav Klimt
  63. Hans Memling
  64. Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
  65. Henri Fantin-Latour
  66. Henri Matisse
  67. Henri Rousseau
  68. Hieronymus Bosch
  69. Jacopo Bassano
  70. Jacopo Bellini
  71. Jan van Eyck
  72. Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
  73. Jean-Honoré Fragonard
  74. Joan Mirò
  75. Johannes Vermeer
  76. John Constable
  77. Joshua Reynolds
  78. Jusepe de Ribera
  79. Leone Battista Alberti
  80. Lorenzo Lotto
  81. Luca Signorelli
  82. Masaccio
  83. Matthias Gruenewald
  84. Maurice Utrillo
  85. Max Ernst
  86. Odilon Redon
  87. Oskar Kokoschka
  88. Pablo Picasso
  89. Palma il Vecchio
  90. Paolo Uccello
  91. Paolo Veronese
  92. Parmigianino
  93. Paul Cézanne
  94. Paul Gauguin
  95. Paul Signac
  96. Peter Paul Rubens
  97. Piero della Francesca
  98. Piero di Cosimo
  99. Piero Pollaiuolo
  100. Pierre-Auguste Renoir
  101. Pierre Bonnard
  102. Pieter Brueghel the Elder
  103. Piet Mondriaan
  104. Pietro Annigoni
  105. Pisanello
  106. Pontormo
  107. Raphael
  108. Rembrandt
  109. Salvador Dalì
  110. Sandro Botticelli
  111. Sebastiano del Piombo
  112. Sebastiano Ricci
  113. Simone Martini
  114. Théodore Géricault
  115. Thomas Gainsborough
  116. Tintoretto
  117. Tiziano
  118. Van Dyck
  119. Vincent van Gogh
  120. Vittore Carpaccio
  121. William Blake
  122. William Hogarth

 

 
CONDIZIONI DI USO DI QUESTO SITO
L'utente può utilizzare il nostro sito solo se comprende e accetta quanto segue:

  • Le risorse linguistiche gratuite presentate in questo sito si possono utilizzare esclusivamente per uso personale e non commerciale con tassativa esclusione di ogni condivisione comunque effettuata. Tutti i diritti sono riservati. La riproduzione anche parziale è vietata senza autorizzazione scritta.
  • Il nome del sito EnglishGratis è esclusivamente un marchio e un nome di dominio internet che fa riferimento alla disponibilità sul sito di un numero molto elevato di risorse gratuite e non implica dunque alcuna promessa di gratuità relativamente a prodotti e servizi nostri o di terze parti pubblicizzati a mezzo banner e link, o contrassegnati chiaramente come prodotti a pagamento (anche ma non solo con la menzione "Annuncio pubblicitario"), o comunque menzionati nelle pagine del sito ma non disponibili sulle pagine pubbliche, non protette da password, del sito stesso.
  • La pubblicità di terze parti è in questo momento affidata al servizio Google AdSense che sceglie secondo automatismi di carattere algoritmico gli annunci di terze parti che compariranno sul nostro sito e sui quali non abbiamo alcun modo di influire. Non siamo quindi responsabili del contenuto di questi annunci e delle eventuali affermazioni o promesse che in essi vengono fatte!
  • L'utente, inoltre, accetta di tenerci indenni da qualsiasi tipo di responsabilità per l'uso - ed eventuali conseguenze di esso - degli esercizi e delle informazioni linguistiche e grammaticali contenute sul siti. Le risposte grammaticali sono infatti improntate ad un criterio di praticità e pragmaticità più che ad una completezza ed esaustività che finirebbe per frastornare, per l'eccesso di informazione fornita, il nostro utente. La segnalazione di eventuali errori è gradita e darà luogo ad una immediata rettifica.

     

    ENGLISHGRATIS.COM è un sito personale di
    Roberto Casiraghi e Crystal Jones
    email: robertocasiraghi at iol punto it

    Roberto Casiraghi           
    INFORMATIVA SULLA PRIVACY              Crystal Jones


    Siti amici:  Lonweb Daisy Stories English4Life Scuolitalia
    Sito segnalato da INGLESE.IT

 
 



GREAT PAINTERS
This article is from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giorgione

All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License 

Giorgione

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 
A purported self-portrait of Giorgione, represented in the guise of David.
A purported self-portrait of Giorgione, represented in the guise of David.

Giorgione (c. 1477 — 1510) is the familiar name of Giorgio Barbarelli da Castelfranco, one of the seminal artists of the High Renaissance in Venice. Giorgione is known for the elusive poetic quality of his work, and for the fact that only very few (around six) paintings are known for certain to be his work. The resulting uncertainty about the identity and meaning of his art has made Giorgione one of the most mysterious figures in European painting.

Life

Pastoral Concert (c. 1508). Louvre, Paris.
Pastoral Concert (c. 1508).
Louvre, Paris.

Giorgione's life is described in Giorgio Vasari's Vite. The painter came from the small town of Castelfranco Veneto, outside Venice. His name sometimes appears as Zorzo. The variant Giorgione (or Zorzon) may be translated "Big George". How early in boyhood he went to Venice we do not know, but internal evidence supports the statement of Ridolfi that he served his apprenticeship there under Giovanni Bellini; there he settled and made his fame.

Contemporary documents record that his gifts were recognized early. In 1500, when he was only twenty-three (that is, if Vasari gives rightly the age at which he died), he was chosen to paint portraits of the Doge Agostino Barberigo and the condottiere Consalvo Ferrante. In 1504 he was commissioned to paint an altarpiece in memory of Matteo Costanzo in the cathedral of his native town, Castelfranco. In 1507 he received at the order of the Council of Ten part payment for a picture (subject not mentioned) on which he was engaged for the Hall of the Audience in the Doge's Palace. In 1507-1508 he was employed, with other artists of his generation, to decorate with frescoes the exterior of the newly rebuilt Fondaco dei Tedeschi (or German Merchants' Hall) at Venice, having already done similar work on the exterior of the Casa Soranzo, the Casa Grimani alli Servi and other Venetian palaces.

The Tempest (c. 1508) Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice, Italy
The Tempest (c. 1508)
Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice, Italy

Vasari gives also as an important event in Giorgione's life, and one which had influence on his work, his meeting with Leonardo da Vinci on the occasion of the Tuscan master's visit to Venice in 1500. In September or October 1510 he died of the plague then raging in the city, and within a few days of his death we find the great art-patroness and amateur, Isabella d'Este, writing from Mantua and trying in vain to secure for her collection a nocturne by his hand.

All accounts agree in representing Giorgione as a person of distinguished and romantic charm, a great lover and musician, given to express in art the sensuous and imaginative grace, touched with poetic melancholy, of the Venetian existence of his time. They represent him further as having made in Venetian painting an advance analogous to that made in Tuscan painting by Leonardo more than twenty years before; that is, as having released the art from the last shackles of archaic rigidity and placed it in possession of full freedom and the full mastery of its means.

Giorgione also introduced a new range of subjects. Besides altarpieces and portraits he painted pictures that told no story, whether biblical or classical, or if they professed to tell such, neglected the action and simply embodied in form and color moods of lyrical or romantic feeling, much as a musician might embody them in sounds. Innovating with the courage and felicity of genius, he had for a time an overwhelming influence on his contemporaries and immediate successors in the Venetian school, including Titian, Sebastiano del Piombo, the elder Palma, Cariani and the two Campagnolas, and even on seniors of long-standing fame such as Giovanni Bellini.

His name and work have exercised, and continue to exercise, no less a spell on posterity. But to identify and define, among the relics of his age and school, precisely what that work is, and to distinguish it from the kindred work of other men whom his influence inspired, is a very difficult matter. There are inclusive critics who still claim for Giorgione nearly every painting of the time that at all resembles his manner, and there are exclusive critics who pare down to half a dozen the list of extant pictures which they will admit to be actually his.

Works

While still in Castelfranco, Giorgione painted the Castelfranco Madonna, a fairly conventional sacra conversazione piece — Madonna enthroned, with saints on either side forming an equilateral triangle. However, the romantic richness of the landscape in the background marks an innovation in Venetian art. Giorgione discovered sfumato or chiaroscuro — the delicate use of shades of color to depict light and perspective — around the same time as Leonardo. His delicate color modulations result from the tiny disconnected spots of paint that he probably derived from manuscript illumination techniques and first brought into oil painting. These gave Giorgione's works the magical glow of light for which they are famous.

Sleeping Venus (c. 1510)Gemaldegalerie Alte Meister, Dresden
Sleeping Venus (c. 1510)
Gemaldegalerie Alte Meister, Dresden

Most entirely central and typical of all Giorgione's extant works is the Sleeping Venus at Dresden, first recognized by Morelli, and now universally accepted, as being the same as the picture seen by the Anonimo and later by Ridolfi in the Casa Marcello at Venice. An exquisitely pure and severe rhythm of line and contour chastens the sensuous richness of the presentment: the sweep of white drapery on which the goddess lies, and of glowing landscape that fills the space behind her, most harmoniously frame her divinity. The use of an external landscape to frame a nude is innovative; but in addition, to add to her mystery, she is shrouded in sleep, spirited away from accessibility to her conscious expression.[1]

It is recorded that the master left this piece unfinished and that the landscape, with a Cupid which subsequent restoration has removed, were completed after his death by Titian. The picture is the prototype of Titian's own Venus of Urbino and of many more by other painters of the school; but none of them attained the fame of the first exemplar. The same concept of idealized beauty is evoked in a virginally pensive Judith from the Hermitage Museum, a large painting which exhibits Giorgione's special qualities of color richness and landscape romance, while demonstrating that life and death are each other's companions rather than foes.

The Tempest has been called the first landscape in the history of Western painting. The subject of this painting is unclear, but its artistic mastery is apparent. The Tempest portrays a soldier and a breast-feeding woman on either side of a stream, amid a city's rubble and an incoming storm. The multitude of symbols in The Tempest offer many interpretations, but none is wholly satisfying. Theories that the painting is about duality (city and country, male and female) have been dismissed since radiography has shown that in the earlier stages of the painting the soldier to the left was a seated female nude.[2]

The Three Philosophers is equally enigmatic and its attribution to Giorgione is still disputed. The three figures stand near a dark empty cave. Sometimes interpreted as symbols of Plato's cave or the Three Magi, they seem lost in a typical Giorgionesque dreamy mood, reinforced by a hazy light so characteristic of his other landscapes, such as the Pastoral Concert, now in the Louvre. The latter "reveals the Venetians' love of textures", for the painter "renders almost palpable the appearance of flesh, fabric, wood, stone, and foliage"[3]. The painting is devoid of harsh contours and its treatment of landscape has been frequently compared to pastoral poetry, hence the title.

Laura (1506) Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
Laura (1506)
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Giorgione and young Titian revolutionized the genre of the portrait as well. It is exceedingly difficult and sometimes simply impossible to differentiate Titian's early pieces from Giorgione's. The only signed and dated work by Giorgione is his portrait of Laura (1 June 1506), one of the first to be painted in the "modern manner", distinguished by dignity, clarity, and sophisticated characterization. Even more striking is the portrait of a Youth from Munich (ca. 1504), acclaimed by art historians for "the indescribably subtle expression of serenity and the immobile features, added to the chiseled effect of the silhouette and modeling"[4].

Assessment

Though he died at the young age of 33, the precocious and versatile painter left a lasting legacy to be developed by Titian and 17th-century artists. Giorgione never subordinated line and colour to architecture, nor an artistic effect to a sentimental presentation. He was the first to paint landscapes with figures, the first to paint genre — movable pictures in their own frames with no devotional, allegorical, or historical purpose — and the first whose colours possessed that ardent, glowing, and melting intensity which was so soon to typify the work of all the Venetian School.

Some works attributed to Giorgione

  • Judith (c. 1504) - Oil on canvas, transferred from panel, 144 x 66,5 cm, The Hermitage, St. Petersburg
  • Madonna and Child Enthroned between St. Francis and St. Nicasius (c. 1505) - Oil on wood, 200 x 152 cm, Duomo, Castelfranco Veneto
  • The Tempest (c. 1505) - Oil on canvas, 82 x 73 cm, Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice
  • Fête Champetre, or Pastoral Concert (c. 1508) - Oil on canvas, 110 x 138 cm, Louvre, Paris
  • Adoration of the Shepherds (1505-10) - Oil on canvas, National Gallery of Art, Washington
  • Portrait of a Young Bride (Laura) (c. 1506) Oil on wood, 41 x 33,5 cm, Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
  • Old Woman (c. 1508) - Oil on canvas, 68 x 59 cm, Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice
  • Portrait of a Youth (1508-10) - Oil on canvas, 72,5 x 54 cm, Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest
  • The Three Philosophers (1509) - Oil on canvas, Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
  • Portrait of Warrior with his Equerry (c. 1509) - Oil on canvas, 90 x 73 cm, Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence
  • Sleeping Venus (c. 1510) - Oil on canvas, 108,5 x 175 cm, Gemaldegalerie, Dresden
  • The Impassioned Singer (c. 1510) - Oil on canvas, 102 x 78 cm, Galleria Borghese, Rome
  • Portrait of a Young Man - Wood, 69,4 x 53,5 cm, Alte Pinakothek, Munich

References

  1. ^ Stanley Freedberg in his encyclopedic monograph, Painting in Italy 1500-1600 (Penguin, 1983), departs from his usual analytical style to extol this Venus in a dizzying poetic abstraction:
    "The shape of being is the visual demonstration of a state of being in which idealized existence is suspended in immutable slow-breathing harmony. All the sensuality has been distilled off this sensous presence, and all incitement; Venus denote not the act of love but the recollection. The perfect embodiment of Giorgione's dream, she dreams his dream herself."
  2. ^ The Tempest
  3. ^ 2006 Britannica
  4. ^ 2006 Britannica
  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
  • Encyclopedia of Artists, volume 2, edited by William H.T. Vaughan, ISBN 0-19-521572-9, 2000
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giorgione"