6735750827 | pre-renaissance art | no perspective or attention to detail unrealistic gold leaf religious | ![]() | 0 |
6735750828 | renaissance art | emphasis on proportion and perspective effort to look 3D and realistic introduction of secular, but majority is religious | ![]() | 1 |
6735750830 | Leonardo Da Vinci, most famous work | Mona Lisa | ![]() | 2 |
6735750831 | Leonardo Da Vinci, renaissance fresco | The Last Supper | ![]() | 3 |
6735750832 | Sandro Botticelli, renaissance | The Birth of Venus | ![]() | 4 |
6735750833 | Donato di Donatello, renaissance bronze | Young David | ![]() | 5 |
6735750834 | Michelangelo, renaissance fresco | Sistine Chapel | ![]() | 6 |
6735750835 | Michelangelo, renaissance marble | David | ![]() | 7 |
6735750836 | Raphael Sanzio, Renaissance Fresco | School of Athens | ![]() | 8 |
6735750837 | Northern Renaissance | visual reality and accurate portrayal of detail is a reraction to the southern renaissance and is much more secular | ![]() | 9 |
6735750838 | Jan von Eyck | Giovanni and His Bride with the incredible invereted mirror and his breath taking picturesque style | ![]() | 10 |
6735750839 | Mannerism | Post Renaissance (1520's) delibererate distortion of proportion | ![]() | 11 |
6735750840 | Domenikos Theotocopoulos, mannerism El Greco | Laocoon | ![]() | 12 |
6735750841 | Baroque | eaggerated motion,drama, tension, euberance, and grandeur from ssculpture, painting, literature and music EMBRACES catholic reform movement | ![]() | 13 |
6735750842 | Gian Lorenzo Berini, baroque | Throne of St. Peter | ![]() | 14 |
6735750843 | Artemisia Gentileschi, baroque | Judith Beheading Holofernes (not the actual, but pretty close. stupid quizlet) | ![]() | 15 |
6735750844 | French Classicism | adherence to certain rules of proportion and sobriety characteristic of the Baroque as it was practiced in Southern and Eastern Europe during the same period | ![]() | 16 |
6735750845 | Nicholas Poussin, French Classicism landscapes and classical mythology | Les Bergers d'Arcadie | ![]() | 17 |
6735750846 | Dutch Realism | primarily interested in the realistic portrayal of secular everyday life | ![]() | 18 |
6735750847 | Rembrandt van Rijn, dutch realist self portraits at first, biblical tales towards end of life | Bathsheba with King David's Letter (ignore the labtop) | ![]() | 19 |
6735750848 | Rococo | emphasized grance and gentle action highly secular rejected strict geometric patterns fondness for curves worked well with baroque architecture | ![]() | 20 |
6735750849 | Jean-Antoine Watteau, Rococo portraits of aristocratic life | ![]() | 21 | |
6735750850 | Johann Balthasar Neumann, Rococo architect | Church of the Vierzehnheiligen | ![]() | 22 |
6735750851 | Neoclassicism | still prevalent in some places classical style and themes | ![]() | 23 |
6735750853 | Jacques-Louis David, neoclassicist numerous themes from greek and roman hsitory | The death of Socrates | ![]() | 24 |
6735750854 | Jacques-Louis David, neoclassicist | Bonaparte Crossing the St. Bernard Pass | ![]() | 25 |
6735750855 | Romanticism | a painting should mirror the artist's vision of the world- it is a relfection of the artist's inner feelings a direct rejection of classical restraint on warmth, emotion and movement individualism-interest in the unique traits of each person romantic heroes and interest in the past love of nature | ![]() | 26 |
6735750856 | Caspar David Friedich | Wanderer above sea of fog (and , romantic preoccupied with god and nature paintings tend to have mystery and mysticism themes) | ![]() | 27 |
6735750857 | Joseph Mallord William Turner, romantic painted numerous landscapes, seascapes, sun rises/sets painted moods by using color and light | ![]() | 28 | |
6735750859 | Eugene Delacroix, romantic passion for color and historical subjects | Liberty Leading the People | ![]() | 29 |
6735750860 | Realism | deal with ordinary characters from real life rather than romantic heroes in unusual settings deliberate rejection of romanticism | ![]() | 30 |
6735750861 | Gustave Courbet, realist word realism first coined to describe one of his paintings subjects= factory workers, peasants, and wives of saloon keepers | The Young Bather | ![]() | 31 |
6735750862 | Jean-Francois Millet, realist painted scenes from rural life, especially peasants in the fields | The Gleaners | ![]() | 32 |
6735750864 | Impressionism | prefer to paint in the country side not much detail, shown with color | ![]() | 33 |
6735750865 | Claude Monet, impressionist | The Lily Pond | ![]() | 34 |
6735750871 | Edgar Degas, impressionism founder of impressionism BALLERINAS | ![]() | 35 | |
6735750875 | Post Impressionism | more attention to structure and form use color and line to express inner feeling and produce a personal statement of reality rather than an imitation of objects shifted from objective reality to subjective reality | ![]() | 36 |
6735750876 | Paul Cezanne, Post impressionist express underlying geometric structure and form of everything he painted | The Card Players | ![]() | 37 |
6735750877 | Vincent Van Gogh, post impressionist color acted as own form of language artists should paint what they feel | ![]() | 38 | |
6735750878 | Cubism | use of geometric designs as a visual stimuli to re-create reality in the viewer's mind | 39 | |
6735750879 | Pablo Picasso, cubist | ![]() | 40 | |
6735750881 | abstract painting | just a bunch of shapes and crap | 41 | |
6735750882 | Wassily Kandinksky, abstract sought to avoid representation all together art should speak directly to the soul-in order to do so it must avoid any reference to visual reality and concentrate on color | ![]() | 42 | |
6735750883 | Dada movement | emphasizes purposelessness of life anti-art contempt for western tradition | ![]() | 43 |
6735750885 | Surrealism | sought a world beyond the material, sensible world world of unconscious thought through the portrayal of fantasies, dreams or nightmares | ![]() | 44 |
6735750887 | Salvador Dali, surrealist | The persistence of memory | ![]() | 45 |
AP European History art Flashcards
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