enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Italian art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_art

    Italian art. Leonardo da Vinci 's Mona Lisa is an Italian art masterpiece worldwide famous. Since ancient times, Greeks, Etruscans and Celts have inhabited the south, centre and north of the Italian peninsula respectively. The very numerous rock drawings in Valcamonica are as old as 8,000 BC, and there are rich remains of Etruscan art from ...

  3. Italian Renaissance painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Renaissance_painting

    Italian Renaissance painting is the painting of the period beginning in the late 13th century and flourishing from the early 15th to late 16th centuries, occurring in the Italian Peninsula, which was at that time divided into many political states, some independent but others controlled by external powers. The painters of Renaissance Italy ...

  4. Italian Renaissance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Renaissance

    The Italian Renaissance (Italian: Rinascimento [rinaʃʃiˈmento]) was a period in Italian history between the 14th and 16th centuries. The period is known for the initial development of the broader Renaissance culture that spread across Western Europe and marked the transition from the Middle Ages to modernity.

  5. Cinquecento - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinquecento

    Art of Italy. The cultural and artistic events of Italy during the period 1500 to 1599 are collectively referred to as the Cinquecento (/ ˌtʃɪŋkwɪˈtʃɛntoʊ /, [1][2][3] Italian: [ˌtʃiŋkweˈtʃɛnto]), from the Italian for the number 500, in turn from millecinquecento, which is Italian for the year 1500. Cinquecento encompasses the ...

  6. Italian modern and contemporary art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_modern_and...

    Italian art critic Germano Celant organized two exhibitions in 1967 and 1968, followed by an influential book called Arte Povera, promoting the notion of a revolutionary art, free of convention, the power of structure, and the market place. Although Celant attempted to encompass the radical elements of the entire international scene, the term ...

  7. Italian Baroque art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Baroque_art

    Artemisia Gentileschi, Judith Slaying Holofernes, 1614–20, Oil on canvas 199 x 162 cm, Uffizi, Florence. Italian Baroque art is a term that is used here to refer to Italian painting and sculpture in the Baroque manner executed over a period that extended from the late sixteenth to the mid eighteenth centuries. [1]

  8. Genoese School (painting) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genoese_School_(painting)

    Galleria degli Uffizi. The Genoese School was a regional movement in Italian painting, initiated in the 17th century. The Republic of Genoa was a rich oligarchic republic, where the authorities were powerful bankers. Unlike Florence, Ferrara, Rome, Rimini, and Venice, Genoa was not developed into a significant arts center during the Renaissance.

  9. Italian Neoclassical and 19th-century art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Neoclassical_and...

    Hay Stacks by Giovanni Fattori, a leading artist in the Macchiaioli movement. The Macchiaioli were a group of Italian painters from Tuscany, active in the second half of the 19th century, who, breaking with the antiquated conventions taught by the Italian academies of art, painted outdoors in order to capture natural light, shade, and colour.