Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist...

21
Renaissance vs Baroque

Transcript of Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist...

Page 1: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.

Renaissance vs Baroque

Page 2: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.

• Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945

>formalist methodology

>objective classifying principles

("painterly" vs. "linear" and the like) were influential in the development of formal analysis in the history of art during the 20th century.

>Principles of Art History, 1915

Page 3: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.

1. From linear to painterlyLinear

draughstmanlyemphasizing contour/outlinedefining formclarity

PainterlyTactileobserving patches or systems of light and of non-local color within shade, making shadow and light integraldeemphasizing outline

Page 4: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.
Page 5: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.

Ingres

Delacroix

Page 6: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.

2. From planar to recession

Planar>objects parallel to the picture plane

>spatial recession is clear

>series of successive planes parallel to picture plane

Recession>planes not separate successive parallel units

>Spatial depth created along diagonals

>frontal plane is not emphasized

Page 7: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.
Page 8: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.
Page 9: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.

3. From closed form to open form

Closed Form>composition= contents seem to stand in clear relation to the edge of the image

>generally within predominantly vertical and horizontal oppositions

>

Open Form>compresses energies and angles or lines of motion which everywhere reach out beyond the composition, and override the horizontal and vertical structure

>spatial relationships not clear

>elements not related to edge or surface

Page 10: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.
Page 11: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.

• Painterly: Difficult to detect where line of one figure or object and another coincide. Look at the drapery. Look at the darkness creeping in.Open Form: Anything could be going on beyond these women. We have a close up shot of a room. The man's body is even off the page.

Page 12: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.
Page 13: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.

4. From multiplicity to unityMultiplicity>individual parts appear as independent units

>Classic art achieves its unity by making the parts independent as free members

>details are each uniquely contemplated

Unity

>work perceived as whole

>individual elements of composition do not stand out

>multiplicity serves to diminish individual parts and enhance unified approach

Page 14: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.

High Renaissance painting

Individual parts

Baroque

perceived as whole

Page 15: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.
Page 16: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.

5. From absolute clarity to relative clarity (related to preceding pair)

Absolute>works with explicit and clearly articulated forms>revelation of the form is clearly articulated>objective clarity

Relative>less explicit and less clearly articulated forms>deliberately avoids objective clearness>pictorial appearance obtained by painterly methods -- AMBIGUITY

Page 17: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.

absolute – relative

Page 18: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.
Page 19: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.

Linear: paint by number effect? Solid lines between color planes & figures.Planar: Not exactly, but technically on 1 planeClosed: Each set of figures, Adam on the left and the other on right, are in their own closed pods. The lines of the ground and the shell frame each area.Multiplicity: If you cut each figure out, they could stand on own.Absolute Clarity: God and Adam bridge the gap-Heaven and Earth.

It doesn't get much more clear than that!

RENAISSANCE

Page 20: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.

3 & 4

Page 21: Renaissance vs Baroque. Heinrich Wölfflin >Swiss art historian, 1864 – 1945 >formalist methodology >objective classifying principles ("painterly" vs.