Saturday, October 12, 2019
The Portraiture of Women During the Renaissance Essay -- Portraiture o
This essay will discuss how women were represented in the portraiture during the Renaissance period. It will explain how the womenââ¬â¢s body was pictured in portraiture as; marriage celebrant, husbands beloved, figures of fertility, mothers, display of wealth, paragons of virtues, husbandââ¬â¢s passive representative, indication of fashion and more (Brown, 2003). Next, it will include analysis from the two female portraits of Leonardo de Vinciââ¬â¢s Ginerva deââ¬â¢ Benci and Sandro Botticelliââ¬â¢s Portrait of a Lady. First, I will explain what portrait means and then represent my own interpretation of Botticelliââ¬â¢s Portrait of a Lady by referring to instructional ââ¬Å"activity dialogâ⬠that details how to analyse the bodyââ¬â¢s subject in the portrait (Mckennee et al., 1994). Second, I will discuss how the Renaissance ideal perception of the womenââ¬â¢s body image was influenced by philosophy of humanism, religious saintly virtues and the poets ââ¬â¢ understandings (Haughton, 2004). In short, I will explain how the radical change occurred in the womanââ¬â¢s portraiture in late fifteen-centuries where the traditional profile view was no longer popular and straight frontal presentation was fully practised. To exemplify this transformation, the painting of Leonardoââ¬â¢s Ginerva deââ¬â¢ Benci will be employed as means of analysis as Leonardo was instrumental in this fundamental change in the womenââ¬â¢s portraiture (Garrard, 2006). Overall, it is quite astonishing how much constructive interpretation can be derived from one single portrait and these expressions will help me to expand my language and writing skill. I think practising the portrait activity-dialog between the viewer and the portraitââ¬â¢s subject expands the mind to be more creative which in turn initiates the development... ...ty in Renaissance art. Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology, 3(4), 229-233. doi: 10.1111/j.1473-2310.2004.00142.x Gromling, A. & Lingesleben,T. (1998). Botticelli 1444/45-1510 [Translation from the German; Fiona Hulse] (1st ed.).Koln, Germany: Neue Stalling, Oldenburg. Long, J.C., (2008). Botticelliââ¬â¢s Birth of Venus as wedding painting. Aurora, The Journal of the History of Art, 9, p.1. ISSN 1527-652X. McKennee, A., Malone, L., Hazelroth, S., & Kinney, B. (1994). Instructional resources: What is represented in a portrait? Art Education, 47(6), 25-32. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/3193462. Morrison, B. (2004, June 12). Portraits. The Guardian, p. 16. Weinberg, G. S., (Jan, 2004). D. G. Rossetti's Ownership of Botticelli's 'Smeralda Brandini.' The Burlington Magazine, 146, No. 1210, pp.20-26. Retrieved from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20073357 The Portraiture of Women During the Renaissance Essay -- Portraiture o This essay will discuss how women were represented in the portraiture during the Renaissance period. It will explain how the womenââ¬â¢s body was pictured in portraiture as; marriage celebrant, husbands beloved, figures of fertility, mothers, display of wealth, paragons of virtues, husbandââ¬â¢s passive representative, indication of fashion and more (Brown, 2003). Next, it will include analysis from the two female portraits of Leonardo de Vinciââ¬â¢s Ginerva deââ¬â¢ Benci and Sandro Botticelliââ¬â¢s Portrait of a Lady. First, I will explain what portrait means and then represent my own interpretation of Botticelliââ¬â¢s Portrait of a Lady by referring to instructional ââ¬Å"activity dialogâ⬠that details how to analyse the bodyââ¬â¢s subject in the portrait (Mckennee et al., 1994). Second, I will discuss how the Renaissance ideal perception of the womenââ¬â¢s body image was influenced by philosophy of humanism, religious saintly virtues and the poets ââ¬â¢ understandings (Haughton, 2004). In short, I will explain how the radical change occurred in the womanââ¬â¢s portraiture in late fifteen-centuries where the traditional profile view was no longer popular and straight frontal presentation was fully practised. To exemplify this transformation, the painting of Leonardoââ¬â¢s Ginerva deââ¬â¢ Benci will be employed as means of analysis as Leonardo was instrumental in this fundamental change in the womenââ¬â¢s portraiture (Garrard, 2006). Overall, it is quite astonishing how much constructive interpretation can be derived from one single portrait and these expressions will help me to expand my language and writing skill. I think practising the portrait activity-dialog between the viewer and the portraitââ¬â¢s subject expands the mind to be more creative which in turn initiates the development... ...ty in Renaissance art. Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology, 3(4), 229-233. doi: 10.1111/j.1473-2310.2004.00142.x Gromling, A. & Lingesleben,T. (1998). Botticelli 1444/45-1510 [Translation from the German; Fiona Hulse] (1st ed.).Koln, Germany: Neue Stalling, Oldenburg. Long, J.C., (2008). Botticelliââ¬â¢s Birth of Venus as wedding painting. Aurora, The Journal of the History of Art, 9, p.1. ISSN 1527-652X. McKennee, A., Malone, L., Hazelroth, S., & Kinney, B. (1994). Instructional resources: What is represented in a portrait? Art Education, 47(6), 25-32. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/3193462. Morrison, B. (2004, June 12). Portraits. The Guardian, p. 16. Weinberg, G. S., (Jan, 2004). D. G. Rossetti's Ownership of Botticelli's 'Smeralda Brandini.' The Burlington Magazine, 146, No. 1210, pp.20-26. Retrieved from: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20073357
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