Quiz 2 Study Guide
Image List:
21-7. Albrecht Dürer. Adam and Eve. 1504. Germany. Northern Renaissance.
21-1 Albrecht Dürer. Self-Portrait. 1500. Germany. Northern Renaissance.
21-A. Pieter Bruegel the Elder. The Return of the Hunters. 1565. Flanders. Northern Renaissance.
22-4. Gianlorenzo Bernini. David. 1623. Baroque. Italy.
22-1. Gianlorenzo Bernini. St. Teresa of Ávila in Ecstasy. 1645–1652. Baroque. Italy.
22-B. Caravaggio. The Calling of St. Matthew. 1599–1600. Baroque. Italy.
22-14. Artemisia Gentileschi. Self-Portrait as the Allegory of Painting. 1630. Baroque. Italy.
22-23. Diego Velázquez. Las Meninas (The Maids of Honor). 1656. Spain. Baroque.
22-28. Peter Paul Rubens. The Raising of the Cross. 1610–1611. Flanders. Baroque.
22-38. Rembrandt van Rijn. The Night Watch. 1642. Holland. Baroque.
29-2. Germain Boffrand. Salon De La Princesse, Hôtel De Soubise. Begun 1732. Rococo. France.
29-4. Jean-Antoine Watteau. Pilgrimage To the Island of Cythera. 1717. France. Rococo.
29-13. Anton Raphael Mengs. Parnassus. 1761. Neoclassicism. Italy.
29-36. Jacques-Louis David. Oath of the Horatii. 1784–1785. France. Neoclassicism. 29-27. Benjamin West. The Death of General Wolfe. 1770. English. Neoclassicism.
29-43. Francisco Goya. Third of May, 1808. 1814–1815. Romanticism. Spain.
29-49. Eugène Delacroix. Liberty Leading the People. 1830. Romantic.
Countries (Places):
Italy, Holland, Flanders, France, Germany, Spain.
Period:
Northern Renaisance. Baroque. Romanticism. Neoclassicism (David, Wolfe). Rococo (boucher, wateau)
Terms:
Johann Joachim Winckelmann: noble simplicity, quiet grandeur. Virtue, sacrifice, reason, public, disegno.
Martin Luther: artists turned to portraiture and other secular subjects
Council of Trent: investigate charges of church corruption and to define Catholic dogma, initiate disciplinary reforms and regulate the training of clerics. Enforcement of religious unity extended to the arts. Traditional