Innovation and experimentation — landscape in early 16th-century Venetian prints and drawings

When Marcantonio Michiel (1484-1552) noted the painting by Giovanni Bellini that he had seen in the house of Taddeo Contarini in Venice in 1525 – the St Francis, now in the Frick Collection, New York – his recollection was of a beautiful landscape representing the wilderness that filled the entire p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Whistler, C
Other Authors: Schumacher, A
Format: Book section
Language:English
Published: Hirmer Publishers 2024
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author Whistler, C
author2 Schumacher, A
author_facet Schumacher, A
Whistler, C
author_sort Whistler, C
collection OXFORD
description When Marcantonio Michiel (1484-1552) noted the painting by Giovanni Bellini that he had seen in the house of Taddeo Contarini in Venice in 1525 – the St Francis, now in the Frick Collection, New York – his recollection was of a beautiful landscape representing the wilderness that filled the entire picture, into the foreground. In recording another painting on the same visit, Giorgione’s Three Philosophers (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna) Michiel was impressed by the treatment of the imposing craggy outcrop, and the rays of the sun. By the 1520s, Venetian art-lovers were attuned to the delights of such representations, not least because of the innovative exploration of landscape in prints and drawings in the early 1500s that helped to shape a new genre in artistic production. The aspects that caught Michiel’s attention such as the filling of the visual field with natural elements, providing an inviting experience, and the contrasts of wild or rocky stretches with luminous skies, were already characteristic of engravings and independent drawings, notably by Giulio Campagnola (c.1482-post 1517) and by his adoptive son, Domenico Campagnola (c.1500-1564), who were each in their separate ways major protagonists in the development of the Venetian landscape in small-scale monochrome works of art.
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spelling oxford-uuid:04328d95-707c-4467-8b3a-11111a7a79c02024-03-21T09:58:38ZInnovation and experimentation — landscape in early 16th-century Venetian prints and drawingsBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_1843uuid:04328d95-707c-4467-8b3a-11111a7a79c0EnglishSymplectic ElementsHirmer Publishers2024Whistler, CSchumacher, AWhen Marcantonio Michiel (1484-1552) noted the painting by Giovanni Bellini that he had seen in the house of Taddeo Contarini in Venice in 1525 – the St Francis, now in the Frick Collection, New York – his recollection was of a beautiful landscape representing the wilderness that filled the entire picture, into the foreground. In recording another painting on the same visit, Giorgione’s Three Philosophers (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna) Michiel was impressed by the treatment of the imposing craggy outcrop, and the rays of the sun. By the 1520s, Venetian art-lovers were attuned to the delights of such representations, not least because of the innovative exploration of landscape in prints and drawings in the early 1500s that helped to shape a new genre in artistic production. The aspects that caught Michiel’s attention such as the filling of the visual field with natural elements, providing an inviting experience, and the contrasts of wild or rocky stretches with luminous skies, were already characteristic of engravings and independent drawings, notably by Giulio Campagnola (c.1482-post 1517) and by his adoptive son, Domenico Campagnola (c.1500-1564), who were each in their separate ways major protagonists in the development of the Venetian landscape in small-scale monochrome works of art.
spellingShingle Whistler, C
Innovation and experimentation — landscape in early 16th-century Venetian prints and drawings
title Innovation and experimentation — landscape in early 16th-century Venetian prints and drawings
title_full Innovation and experimentation — landscape in early 16th-century Venetian prints and drawings
title_fullStr Innovation and experimentation — landscape in early 16th-century Venetian prints and drawings
title_full_unstemmed Innovation and experimentation — landscape in early 16th-century Venetian prints and drawings
title_short Innovation and experimentation — landscape in early 16th-century Venetian prints and drawings
title_sort innovation and experimentation landscape in early 16th century venetian prints and drawings
work_keys_str_mv AT whistlerc innovationandexperimentationlandscapeinearly16thcenturyvenetianprintsanddrawings