From Wikipedia
Great Artists of the Italian Renaissance
Lecture Two
From Gothic to Renaissance
Gothic art was a Medieval
art movement
that developed in France out of Romanesque
art in the mid-12th century, led by the concurrent development of
Gothic
architecture. It spread to all of Western Europe, but took over
art more completely north of the Alps,
never quite effacing more classical styles in Italy. In the late 14th
century, the sophisticated court style of International
Gothic developed, which continued to evolve until the late 15th
century. In many areas, especially Germany, Late Gothic art continued
well into the 16th century, before being subsumed into Renaissance
art. Primary media in the Gothic period included sculpture,
panel painting,
stained glass,
fresco and
illuminated
manuscript. The easily recognisable shifts in architecture from
Romanesque to Gothic, and Gothic to Renaissance styles, are typically
used to define the periods in art in all media, although in many ways
figurative art developed at a different pace.
The earliest Gothic art was monumental
sculpture, on the walls of Cathedrals and abbeys. Christian art
was often typological
in nature (see Medieval
allegory), showing the stories of the New Testament and the Old
Testament side by side. Saints' lives were often depicted. Images of
the Virgin
Mary changed from the Byzantine iconic form to a more human and
affectionate mother, cuddling her infant, swaying from her hip, and
showing the refined manners of a well-born aristocratic courtly lady.
Secular art
came in to its own during this period with the rise of cities,
foundation
of universities, increase in trade, the establishment of a
money-based economy and the creation of a bourgeois
class who could afford to patronize the arts and commission works
resulting in a proliferation of paintings and illuminated
manuscripts. Increased literacy and a growing body of secular
vernacular literature encouraged the representation of secular
themes in art. With the growth of cities, trade guilds
were formed and artists were often required to be members of a
painters'
guild—as a result, because of better record keeping, more
artists are known to us by name in this period than any previous;
some artists were even so bold as to sign their names.