The painters of the
end of the fifteenth century who met with the greatest success in solving these
problems were Giovanni and Gentile Bellini, Cima da Conegliano, and Carpaccio,
and we find each of them enjoyable to the degree that he was in touch with the
life of his day. I have already spoken of pageants and of how characteristic
they were of the Renaissance, forming as they did a sort of safety-valve for its
chief passions.Venice,5+ Pieces paintings, too, knew the love of glory, and the passion was perhaps
only the more intense because it was all dedicated to the State. There was
nothing the Venetians would not do to add to its greatness, glory, and
splendour. It was this which led them to make of the city itself that wondrous
monument to the love and awe they felt for their Republic,abstract art oil paintings, which still rouses
more admiration and gives more pleasure than any other one achievement of the
art-impulse in man. They were not content to make their city the most beautiful
in the world; they performed ceremonies in its honour partaking of all the
solemnity of religious rites. Processions and pageants by land and by sea, free
from that gross element of improvisation which characterised them elsewhere in
Italy, formed no less a part of the functions of the Venetian State than the
High Mass in the Catholic Church. Such a function,original oil paintings wholesale, with Doge and Senators
arrayed in gorgeous costumes no less prescribed than the raiments of
ecclesiastics, in the midst of the fairy-like architecture of the Piazza or
canals, was the event most eagerly looked forward to, and the one that gave most
satisfaction to the Venetian's love of his State, and to his love of splendour,
beauty, and gaiety. He would have had them every day if it were possible, and,
to make up for their rarity,hand painted oil paintings, he loved to have representations of them. So most
Venetian pictures of the beginning of the sixteenth century tended to take the
form of magnificent processions, if they did not actually represent them. They
are processions in the Piazza, as in Gentile Bellini's "Corpus Christi" picture,
or on the water, as in Carpaccio's picture where St. Ursula leaves her home; or
they represent what was a gorgeous but common sight in Venice,modern oil paintings of flowers, the reception or
dismissal of ambassadors, as in several pictures of Carpaccio's St. Ursula
series; or they show simply a collection of splendidly costumed people in the
Piazza, as in Gentile's "Preaching of St. Mark." Not only the pleasure-loving
Carpaccio, but the austere Cima, as he grew older, turned every biblical and
saintly legend into an occasion for the picture of a pageant. oil paintings for sale uk
But there was a further reason for the popularity of such pictures. The
decorations which were then being executed by the most reputed masters in the
Hall of Great Council in the Doge's Palace, were, by the nature of the subject,
required to represent pageants. The Venetian State encouraged painting as did
the Church, in order to teach its subjects its own glory in a way that they
could understand without being led on to critical enquiry. Venice was not the
only city, it is true,modern abstract art oil painting, that used painting for political purposes; but the
frescoes of Lorenzetti at Siena were admonitions to govern in accordance with
the Catechism, while the pictures in the Great Hall of the Doge's Palace were of
a nature to remind the Venetians of their glory and also of their state policy.
These mural paintings represented such subjects as the Doge bringing about a
reconciliation between the Pope and the Emperor Barbarossa, an event which
marked the first entry of Venice into the field of Continental politics,oil paintings for sale cheap, and
typified as well its unchanging policy, which was to gain its own ends by
keeping a balance of power between the allies of the Pope and the allies of his
opponents. The first edition, so to speak, of these works had been executed at
the end of the fourteenth century and in the beginning of the fifteenth. Toward
the end of that century it no longer satisfied the new feeling for reality and
beauty, and thus had ceased to serve its purpose, which was to glorify the
State. The Bellini, Alvise Vivarini, and Carpaccio were employed to make a
second rendering of the very same subjects, and this gave the Venetians ample
opportunity for finding out how much they liked pageant pictures. oil paintings for sale onlineIt is curious to note here that at the same time Florence also commissioned its greatest painters to execute works for its Council Hall, but left them practically free to choose their own subjects. Michelangelo chose for his theme "The Florentines while Bathing Surprised by the Pisans," and Leonardo "The Battle of the Standard." Neither of these was intended in the first place to glorify the Florentine Republic,wholesale oil paintings, but rather to give scope to the painter's genius, Michelangelo's for the treatment of the nude, Leonardo's for movement and animation. Each, having given scope to his peculiar talents in his cartoon, had no further interest, and neither of the undertakings was ever completed. Nor do we hear that the Florentine councillors enjoyed the cartoons, which were instantly snatched up by students who turned the hall containing them into an academy. abstract art oil paintings
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