Toward The High Renaissance
The High Renaissance is just that—the height of the Renaissance! When you think of the Renaissance, the names that come to mind are probably the artists of this period: Leonardo and Michelangelo, for instance. When many people think of the greatest work of art in the Western world, they think of Michelangelo's Sistine Ceiling. This is a period of big, ambitious projects.
What exactly is the High Renaissance, and how is it different from the Early Renaissance?
As the Humanism of the Early Renaissance grows, a problem begins to develop. Have a look again at Fra Filippo Lippi's Madonna and Child with Angels. We see in this painting an image of the Madonna and Christ Child that has become so real, the figures so human, that we can hardly tell that these are spiritual figures (except for the faint shadow of a halo).
On the other hand, we have seen that in the Middle Ages, if you want to
make your figure spiritual then you sacrifice its realism.
Its
almost as if there is this feeling in the Early Renaissance that if you
want to be spiritual, then your painting can't look real, and if you
want it to be real, then it loses some spirituality. It has to be one
or the other. Well, Leonardo da Vinci comes along, and basically says—you don't have to make that choice. It's not either/or. Leonardo
is able to create figures who are physical and real -- just as real as
Lippi's or Masaccio's figures and yet they have an undeniable and
intense spirituality at the same time. So we can say that Leonardo
unites the real and spiritual, or soul and substance.
The best way to see this, is in this painting by Verrocchio, who Leonardo was apprenticed to when he was young.
Andrea del Verrocchio (with Leonardo), Baptism of Christ, 1470-75, oil and tempera on panel, 70 3/4 x 59 3/4 inches or 180 x 152 cm (Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence)
Verocchio asked Leonardo to paint one of the angels in his paining of the Baptism of Christ, that we see here. Can you tell which angel is Leonardo's?
One angel should look
more like a boy—that's the Early Renaissance angel (the one painted
by Verrocchio) and the other angel should look like a High
Renaissance angel, like a spiritual figure—truly like an angel sent
by God from heaven (that's Leonardo's angel).
Can you tell which one is by Leonardo? Take a minute and look closely.
(Answer: the Angel on the left)
Leonardo's angel is ideally beautiful and moves in a graceful and complex way, twisting to the left but raising her head up and to the right. Figures that are elegant and ideally beautiful are a key characteristic of the High Renaissance.
Where and When


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Bahso Sujashi wrote on Sunday, January 27, 2013
Yeah; This article explains a lot. Leonardo Da Vinci was a master of his time.
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