Archive for May, 2011

The Art of Giovanni Bellini

May 25th, 2011

Some aspects of the art of Giovanni Bellini:

1. The work of Giovanni Bellini, one of the greatest of the Venetian painters, shows a deep fascination with light and color. His paintings display a high degree of realism and pay close attention to intricate details. His technique is superb, but what I find interesting about Giovanni Bellini is that he never stopped learning – he learned from visiting foreign artists, from his own students – and he kept improving and improvising. He painted right into his vigorous eighties and some of his best works are from this period.

2. Giovanni Bellini did his art apprenticeship in his father Jacopo Bellini’s workshop in Venice. The principal style of art then was the Byzantine Icon type of art. Giovanni developed this into a more realistic style. The two painters that principally influenced him in developing a realistic mode of painting were Andrea Mantegna, who was also his brother-in-law, and the Sicilian Painter Antonello da Messina. The works of Donatello and other artists from Padua also had an important role in his artistic development.

3. Andrea Mantegna taught him spatial perspective and the two of them painted different versions of the same topic ‘Agony in the Garden’, based on a sketch from Jacopo Bellini’s sketchbook.

4. From Antonello da Messina, Giovanni Bellini picked up the technique of Oil Painting. Prior to this, he had mainly worked in Tempera, painting on specially prepared wood panels. He also learned to pay attention to the details in a painting and stressed more on depicting extremely realistic figures. Oil, he discovered, was a more versatile and convenient medium than Tempera.

5. Giovanni Bellini was an intensely religious man and some of this can be gleaned from his paintings. His favorite subject to paint was Madonna and Child. He did many variations on this theme. He was the first painter who arranged his figures in one single panel and so made their impact more effective; prior to this religious figures were painted on separate panels.

6. Although painting religious themes was what he liked to do best, Giovanni Bellini did not shirk from painting secular paintings and portraits. With the Renaissance right around the corner, there was a growing demand for secular themed pictures and Giovanni Bellini was a canny enough businessman to sense which way the wind was blowing and adjust himself accordingly. He accepted the lucrative commissions to paint the portraits of the Venetian nobles and politicians and also painted the rich tourists from other nations who thronged to Venice for its culture and liked to take back a painting or two by way of souvenirs.

7. One of his best known portraits is that of Leonardo Loredan, the Doge of Venice, painted in 1501 and currently in the National Gallery in London. It is a beautifully delicate and realistic portrait. The color scheme is softly balanced and the modeling is soft, the outlines indistinct. The whole effect is warm, mellow, and lyrical. You can sense the Doge’s authority as well as his humanity. The fabric of the Doge’s cloak is stunningly depicted.

8. For all his talent and hard work, however, Giovanni was prone to procrastinating. He was capable of taking as much as two years to complete one painting and this often drove his clients nuts. One of them, Isabelle d’Este, after much pleading and inquiring after the work, even took him to court to get him to finish the commission.

9. Giovanni’s older brother and partner in the art business, Gentile Bellini, died nine years before him. Before his death, he asked Giovanni to finish his incomplete painting ‘St. Mark Preaching to the Alexandrians’. However, knowing his younger brother’s penchant for delay, he made it a condition for receiving their father’s precious sketchbooks. He could get them only if he completed the painting. With this incentive, Giovanni was spurred into completing the project and in record time too.

10. After his brother’s death, Giovanni succeeded him as the official State Artist of Venice and remained in this lofty position until replaced by Titian.

11. Titian was one of the many young artists that studied and developed their art in Giovanni’s studio. He and another of Giovanni’s pupils, Giorgione, went even further than their master and revolutionized Venetian painting.

Style and Characteristics of Gothic Architecture

May 24th, 2011

History: Gothic architecture

It is very important, prior to conducting research on Gothic architecture, to note that ‘Gothic’ has nothing to do with the Goths. It is a term that was commonly used in the 1530s, to be precise, by Giorgio Vasari, to refer to architecture that flaunted the ‘rude and barbaric’ fashion. This style of architecture is common to pointed styles that are an inseparable part of ecclesiastical structures. The remains of the old medieval style flaunts bowed and cusped arches and centerpieces and columns that symbolize wealth and pride.

Gothic Style of Architecture

Authentic Gothic revival during the mid-18th century brought to the forefront many European ecclesiastical and university structures. The style displays overtones of spiral work and steeples, columns and extravagant ceilings and pointed roof designs. Gothic architecture is common to most surviving cathedrals, churches and abbeys of Europe.

It is also seen when touring castles, town halls, palaces, guild offices and a number of universities. Gothic style of architecture is most expressed by its emotional appeal. The structures built in this style display architectural distinction and are considered works of art. Most of them are listed as the World Heritage Sites with UNESCO.

It is interesting to note that architects of the modern world believe that the ‘pointed arch’ was actually the result of an attempt to hide technical flaws! In Gothic architecture, the style preferred was ‘vertical and light’. All attempts were made to develop architectural features that provided engineering solutions to design the same. Most Gothic plans display transverse arms or transepts and clerestory windows.

Characteristics of Gothic Architecture

Gothic architecture is unique in its use of materials. The structures took on different styles across Europe. Regional influence played a major role in the design variations and preference for building material. While in France, limestone was used extensively, England witnessed extensive use of red sandstone and coarse limestone with Purbeck marble architectural features. Similarly, while in Northern Germany and the Baltic nations, the tradition was of using brick, in Italy, marble was the preferred material.

This form of architecture also accommodated timber, which is seen to this day in the splendid hammer-beam ceilings and rafters. The style has also been vastly influenced by the preferences of the different monasteries across Europe, like the Benedictines, Cistercians, Cluniac, Franciscans and Dominicans. Gothic architecture is the developed form of Romanesque architecture. It is a blend of the Renaissance styles and Brunelleschi’s Classical style.

Ribbed vaults and buttresses, ambulatories, wheel windows, clustered columns and spires are all special features of this form of ecclesiastical architecture. The Gothic vaults were designed to hold up irregularly shaped trapezoids. They also offered support to the pointed arch channels and enabled architects to raise the vaults to desired heights. While the pointed arch offered flexibility to the structure, the vaulted shape offered to interiors and exteriors, structural decoration.

The other features include:

Ornate door tympanums.
Solid masonry penetrated by small vents.
Features that enable light to triumph over substance.
Pointed arches, part of internal features and the external structure.
Resurfacing of structures to meet the preferences of aesthetic and ideological appeal.
Pinnacles and traceries, rose windows.

Examples of Gothic Architecture

The following are some popular examples of authentic Gothic Architecture:

Batalha Monastery, Portugal.
Church of the Batalha Monastery, Portugal.
Salamanca Cathedral, Spain.
St. Stephen’s Church, Vienna.
Autun Cathedral, France.
Notre Dame, Paris.
Palace of Westminster, London.
Salisbury Cathedral, England.
King’s College Chapel, England.
Basilica of Mary Magdalene in Saint-Maximin, Provence.
Old New Synagogue, Prague.
Palais des Papes, Avignon.
House of Jacques Coeur, Bourges.
Malbork Castle of the Teutonic Knights, Poland.
Gasson Hall, Boston College, Massachusetts.