Mannerism (1520-1600)

Mannerism

(1520 - 1600) Mannerism was an art style that focused on the human form, depicted in intricate poses and in exaggerated, not always realistic settings. The term Mannerism was derived from the Italian word maniera, translated as “style.” It developed in Florence and Rome between 1520 and 1600, as a style that rejected the balance of the Renaissance period in favor of a more emotional and distorted point of view. This art style reflected the tension in Europe at the time of its popularity. The movement eventually gained favor in northern Italy and most of central and northern Europe. Paintings contained artificial color and unrealistic spatial proportions. Figures were often elongated and exaggerated, positioned in imaginative and complex poses. Works of the movement are often unsettling and strange, probably a result of the time period’s upheaval from the Reformation, the plague, and the sack of Rome. In 1600, Mannerists were accused of disrupting the unity of Renaissance classicism. However, in retrospect, the Mannerist movement supplied the link between Renaissance perfection and the emotional Baroque art that later developed in the 17th century.


Allegory of Happiness (1564) by Angelo Bronzino


http://www.allpaintings.org/v/Mannerism/

Venus Anadyomene

Venus Anadyomene


Artist: Titian (1477?-1576)
Date: 1525
Technique: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: H 75.8 x W 57.6 cm

Venus Anadyomene offered a natural subject for a fountain: the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC has a lifesize bronze plumbed so that water drips from Venus’ hair, modelled by a close follower of Giambologna, late sixteenth century.


Artist

Titian (1477?-1576)
Alternative names: Tiziano Vecelli; Tiziano Vecellio

Tiziano Vecelli or Vecellio, commonly known as Titian, was a 16th century Renaissance painter in Venice, Italy.


References

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Anadyomene.jpg
http://akorra.com/2010/03/06/top-20-beautiful-female-nude-artwork/


This image (or other media file) is in the public domain because its copyright has expired. This applies to the United States, Australia, the European Union and those countries with a copyright term of life of the author plus 70 years.


Titian Venuses | Female nude in paintings | Venus Anadyomenes | 1525 paintings | National Gallery of Scotland | Hair care in art | Female red hair in art | Female long hair in art | Paintings of standing women | Oil paintings of women | People with water | Women facing left | Renaissance paintings in the United Kingdom