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THE BAROQUE AGE 1600-1715 Chapter 14

THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

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Page 1: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

THE BAROQUE AGE1600-1715Chapter 14

Page 2: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Origin of “Baroque”

• Barocco (Portuguese) meaning an irregularly shaped pearl

• Baroco (Italian) a false scholastic syllogism, a caricature of logic and hence a form of sophistry; a tortuous argument in logic

Page 3: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

THREE MANIFESTATIONS OF BAROQUE

• FLORID BAROQUE

• CLASSICAL BAROQUE

• RESTRAINED BAROQUE

Page 4: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Florid Baroque

• Centered in Italy

• Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes

• Strongly supported by the Popes

• Grand buildings and elaborate decorations in proclaiming power & richness of the Church

• Vitality and theatrical effects were prized over restraint & repose

Page 5: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Architects

• Carlo Maderno – redesigned St. Peter’s Basilica from a Greek cross to a Latin cross

• Gian Lorenzo Bernini – designed the public square fronting St. Peter’s

Page 6: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Artists• Gian Lorenzo Bernini [sculptor, Italy]

– Baldacchino of St. Peter’s

– Ecstasy of St. Teresa

• (Michelangelo Merisi) Caravaggio [painter, Italy]– Martyrdom of St. Matthew

• Artemisia Gentileschi [painter- female, Italy]– Judith and Her Maidservant with the Head of

Holofernes

Page 7: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

• Diego Velásquez [painter, Spain]– Las Meninas

– The Waterseller of Seville

• Peter Paul Rubens [painter, Flanders]– The Education of Marie de’ Medici

– Self-portrait

• Andrea Pozzo [painter, Italy]– Allegory of the Missionary Work of the Jesuits

(Sant’ Ingnazio in Rome)

– quadratura, in which architecture and fancy are intermixed

Page 8: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

ST. PETER’S BASILICA AND PIAZZA

Piazza designed by Gian Lorenzo Bernini

Basilica redesigned by Carlo Maderno

Page 9: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and
Page 10: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and
Page 11: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and
Page 12: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Baldacchino in St. Peter’s by

Bernini

Page 13: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

The Ecstasy of St. Teresaby Bernini

Page 14: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

The Martyrdom

of St. Matthew

by Caravaggio

Page 15: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Judith and her Maidservant with the

Head of Holofernesby

Artmesia Gentileschi

Page 16: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Judith Beheading Holofernes

by ArtmesiaGentileschi

Page 17: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Las Meninas(The Maids of

Honor)by

Diego Velázquez

Page 18: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Two Young Men Eating at a Humble TableBy

Velasquez

The Waterseller of Seville

Page 19: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

The Education of Marie de’ Medici

by Peter Paul Rubens

Page 20: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Self-PortraitOf

Peter Paul Rubens

Page 21: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Allegory of the Missionary Work of the JesuitsBy Andrea Pozzo [Church of Sant’ Ignazio]

Page 22: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Classical Baroque

• Principally in France

• Embraced grandeur & opulence, but more classical in style

• Exemplified in Palace of Versailles, lifestyle of Louis XIV

• Secular focus, identified with absolutism

• Impersonal, controlled, & measured in their arts

• Simplistic & dignified

Page 23: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Architects• Louis Le Vau – Versailles Palace

• Jules Hardouin-Mansart – Versailles Palace

• Charles LeBrun – Hall of Mirrors in Versailles Palace

• André Le Nôtre – landscape architect & sculptor at Versailles Palace

Painter• Nicholas Poussin – lived in Rome, but

practiced Classical Baroque

Page 24: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

THE PALACE OF VERSAILLES

Page 25: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and
Page 26: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and
Page 27: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and
Page 28: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Hall of Mirrors, Versailles Palace

Page 29: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and
Page 30: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Et in Arcadia Ego by Nicolas Poussin

Page 31: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Helios & Phaeton

byNicolas Poussin

Page 32: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Restrained Baroque

• Found in Netherlands and England

• Simpler art works

• Humanized Baroque exuberance

• Appealed to democratic sentiments

• Reflected common human experience

Page 33: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

• Sir Christopher Wren was the premier architect of restrained baroque in England, thanks in part to the Great London Fire

– St. Paul’s Cathedral

– St. Bride’s Church

Page 34: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and
Page 35: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and
Page 36: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and
Page 37: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and
Page 38: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

ARTISTS• Rembrandt Van Rijn (Netherlands) 0

[Rembrohnt Von Rain]

– The Blinding of Samson (1636)

– The Night Watch (1642).

– Self-Portrait (1669)

• Jan (Johannes) Vermeer (Netherlands)

– The Lacemaker (1669-1670)

– Girl With A Pearl Earring (1665-1666)

Page 39: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

• Judith Leyster (Netherlands)

– Self-Portrait

– The Happy Couple

• Anthony van Dyck (Flanders/Belgium & England)

– James Stuart, Duke of Richmond and Lennox (1630?)

– Charles I

Page 40: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

The Blinding of Samson by Rembrandt van Rijn

Page 41: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Night Watch

by Rembrandt

van Rijn

Page 42: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Self-Portraits of Rembrandt van Rijn

Page 43: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

The Lacemaker

byJan

Vermeer

Page 44: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

The Girl with A Pearl Earring

byJan Vermeer

Page 45: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Self-Portrait of Judith Leyster The Happy Couple

Page 46: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

James Stuart, Duke of Richmond & Lennox Charles I by Anthony van Dyck

Page 47: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Baroque Literature• Characterized by

– ornate language

– characterization of individuals & types with emotional extremes

• France

– Two great tragedians

• Cornielle (Le Cid)

• Racine (Phèdra)

– Comedian: Moliere (Tartuffe)

Page 48: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Neoclassicism

• Was greatly formalized in France.

• Neoclassicists were concerned with 6 primary topics

– Verisimilitude

– Purity of dramatic types

– The five-act form

– Decorum

– The purposes of drama (to teach & to please)

– The three unities

Page 49: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

verisimilitude• “the appearance of truth”

• Embodied reality, morality, and generality or abstraction

• Playwright had to exclude anything that could not happen in real life, unless they were accepted part of a Greek myth or biblical material (and then had to be minimized)

• Discouraged soliloquies and chorus as unnatural. Replaced such with a trusted companion or confidant to whom they could reveal innermost secrets.

Page 50: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

• Violence was removed offstage because of difficulty in making it convincing (real).

• Dramatist must teach moral lessons, reveal life’s ideal moral patterns. Whenever injustice appeared to prevail, it was explained as a “part of God’s plan,” beyond human comprehension, but inevitably just.

• Truth = those norms that are discoverable through the rational and systematic examination of phenomena (natural or man-made)

• These “truth in norms” were to extend to every aspect of dramatic composition.

Page 51: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

purity of dramatic types• Only two forms allowed: tragedy and comedy.

• Other forms were inferior because they were mixed forms.

• Tragedy norms

– Characters drawn form rulers or nobility

– Stories dealt with affairs of state, downfall of rulers and similar events

– Always with unhappy endings

– Style was lofty and poetic

Page 52: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

• Comedy norms– Characters drawn from middle or lower classes

– Stories dealt with domestic & private affairs

– Always with happy endings

– Style characterized by use of ordinary language

• These norms were to be strictly adhered to.

• Deviate plays did exist, but were denounced as not serious efforts and unworthy of critical consideration, products of poorly educated or tasteless writers, and labeled irregular or illegitimate drama

Page 53: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

Decorum = fittingness or appropriateness

• The principle of character portrayal was termed decorum

• Each age group, rank, profession, and sex was said to have its own essence. Each dramatist was expected to remain true to these norms in character creation.

• Dramatist must only write about the permanent aspects of humanity, governing patterns that remain the same in all places and time periods.

5-Act form: Any legitimate play must be written in 5 acts

Page 54: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

3 unities: time, place, action

• Verisimilitude dictated no more than 24 hours of subjective time should pass during a play.

• Because the audience knows it has only been in one place, all action must take place within one location. This was gradually loosened to allow for a change of place PROVIDING it could be reached within 24 hours.

• Only ONE action allowed. No subplots were permissable.

Page 55: THE BAROQUE AGE - I · PDF fileFlorid Baroque •Centered in Italy •Aesthetic values subordinated to spiritual purposes •Strongly supported by the Popes •Grand buildings and

ENGLAND• John Milton Paradise Lost

– Puritan who supported Oliver Cromwell

– Mixed Christian legend and ancient epic

– Known for quote “Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven,” attributed to Lucifer