Analyzing fourteenth- through sixteenth-century 2D art - AP Art History

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Question

Annunciation--fra_angelico

The above painting depicts what biblical scene that was a common feature of medieval art?

Answer

This painting is by the Medieval artist Fra Angelico and known as the Cortona Annunciation. Painted from 1433-1434, it depicts the archangel Gabriel telling the Virgin Mary that she is pregnant with the Christ child. The Annunciation, as a key moment in the Bible, was a very popular theme in Medieval European art. This particular painting was part of an altarpiece in a church in Cortona, Italy, and painted by a priest.

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Question

In Medieval art, a man dying with arrows in his sides depicts __________.

Answer

Saint Sebastian was a martyr of the early Christian church who died in the Diocletian persecutions of the third century CE. He became a popular figure in medieval art, usually shown as being tied to a tree with arrows in his sides. This image was to convey what an appropriate Christian martyr should look like.

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Question

The Virgin Mary is usually depicted wearing what color garment in medieval art?

Answer

As one of the most revered figures in Christianity, the Virgin Mary was a constant theme of medieval religious art. In order to function as a highly visible symbol in a mostly illiterate culture, many different symbols were used to distinguish Mary. Most important was her robe, which was typically a bright blue color, which denoted expensive silks.

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Question

In Christian hagiography, which figure is depicted as having a stone in his head?

Answer

Saint Stephen is traditionally considered the first martyr of Christianity, and his death by stoning is told in the biblical book of Acts. Due to the circumstances of his death, he was usually depicted with a stone implanted in his skull. Thanks to his position as "the first martyr," Saint Stephen very commonly depicted in Medieval art.

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Question

File:Fra Angelico 069.jpg File:CaravaggioEmmaus.jpg

Figure 3 Figure 4

Each of these paintings portray a story from __________.

Answer

These two images each portray an important story from the Gospels in the New Testament, the four books that tell the life of Jesus Christ. The image on the left is of the Annunciation, the announcement an angel made to the Virgin Mary telling her that she was pregnant with the Christ child. It was painted in 1433 by Fra Angelico. The image on the right is of the risen Jesus encountering his disciples in Emmaus, painted by Caravaggio in 1606.

Figure 3: The Annunciation (Cortona) by Fra Angelico (1433)

Figure 4: Supper at Emmaus (Milan) by Caravaggio (1606)

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Question

File:Fra Angelico 069.jpg File:CaravaggioEmmaus.jpg

Figure 3 Figure 4

Images like the painting shown in Figure 3 were particularly important for Christians who were __________.

Answer

Most people in Medieval Europe could not read or write, but the Catholic church had a vested interest in helping all of its members to become familiar with and understand the stories of the Bible. A painting like the one presented here by Fra Angelico not only shows the Angel Gabriel telling the Virgin Mary of her status as the mother of the Christ child, but gives a larger symbolic structure to the event.

Figure 3: The Annunciation (Cortona) by Fra Angelico (1433)

Figure 4: Supper at Emmaus (Milan) by Caravaggio (1606)

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Question

300px-dama_z_gronostajem 558px-sandro_botticelli_-la_nascita_di_venere-google_art_project-_edited

Both of these images were painted in _________.

Answer

Each of these images, Leonardo da Vinci's 1489 "Lady with an Ermine" and Sandro Botticelli's 1486 "The Birth of Venus", are classic examples of Italian Renaissance paintings. Da Vinci painted in Milan, under the patronage of the Sforza family, the longtime Dukes of Milan. Botticelli had the Medici family as patrons in the city-state of Florence.

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Question

300px-dama_z_gronostajem

In the painting, the animal represents _____________.

Answer

The animal is an ermine (which is a type of weasel). In Leonardo da Vinci's time, the ermine was commonly used throughout Europe as a symbol for purity.

If you don't remember something like this on test day, you can still make an educated guess. For example, you might not remember anything about ermines, but perhaps you remember that white doves are often used in art to symbolize purity. That would lead you to the correct answer.

At the very least, you can probably eliminate the answers "disgrace" and "sensuality" just from looking at the painting. Eliminating two of the four answer choices doubles your chances of guessing correctly.

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Question

558px-sandro_botticelli_-la_nascita_di_venere-google_art_project-_edited

The painting depicts a scene from ___________.

Answer

Botticelli's "The Birth of Venus" portrays a story from Greek mythology. This is common in Italian Renaissance art.

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Question

300px-dama_z_gronostajem

The painting demonstrates _____________, which was introduced during the Renaissance.

Answer

While da Vinci's "Lady with an Ermine" is an excellent portrait in its own right, the truly revolutionary aspect of the work is the small sense of motion in the painting. Da Vinci's subject is turning ever so slightly and is captured in a small amount of tension. The ability to capture movement was something introduced during the Renaissance.

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Question

558px-sandro_botticelli_-la_nascita_di_venere-google_art_project-_edited

The painting was created for the leading family of __________.

Answer

This is "The Birth of Venus" by Sandro Botticelli. He worked directly for the Medicis, a family of bankers who ruled the northern Italian city-state of Florence.

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Question

558px-sandro_botticelli_-la_nascita_di_venere-google_art_project-_edited

Venus' pose is called ________.

Answer

In Botticelli's "The Birth of Venus", Venus is standing in the classical contrapposto pose. Literally meaning "counter pose", the pose features the subject placing most of her weight on one foot, giving the effect of movement. This classical pose became very popular in the Renaissance, in large part because of Botticelli.

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Question

Van_eyck_-_arnolfini_portrait

Figure 1

481px-weyden_madonna_1440

Figure 2

The man in red in the lower image is most likely __________.

Answer

In the Christian tradition, particularly in Medieval Christianity, the inventor of Christian icons and the first person to paint any images of Christ was the Evangelist Saint Luke. In his 1440 painting, "Saint Luke Drawing the Virgin, the early Netherlandish painter Rogier van der Weyden includes someone painting the Madonna and Child with a book open at his feet. Both of these clues indicate that the figure is Saint Luke.

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Question

Van_eyck_-_arnolfini_portrait

Figure 1

481px-weyden_madonna_1440

Figure 2

Figure 1 is an early example of what would come to be known as __________.

Answer

"Genre painting" is a term used to denote any painting of an everyday scene, rather than a history painting, portrait, or landscape. "Genre painting" was essentially unheard of in the Middle Ages, when the focus was on devotional art and paintings of kings and rulers. Jan van Eyck's 1434 Arnolfini Portrait, which depicts a merchant getting married in his own chambers, is an early example of a move toward genre painting, which would become much more popular during the Renaissance.

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Question

Van_eyck_-_arnolfini_portrait

Figure 1

481px-weyden_madonna_1440

Figure 2

Figure 1 is remarkable for its inclusion of __________.

Answer

In the very back of the painting, the "Arnolfini Portrait" by Jan van Eyck, is a convex mirror that is positioned directly between the two main figures. This mirror reflects the back of the couple, and the entire room. The use of such a device was peculiar for medieval art, but presaged some of the new approaches that would be taken during the Italian Renaissance.

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Question

Van_eyck_-_arnolfini_portrait

Figure 1

481px-weyden_madonna_1440

Figure 2

The garden in the background of Figure 2 represents __________.

Answer

As an image of Christian devotion, Rogier van der Weyden's "Saint Luke Drawing the Virgin" is laced with important symbolism, including the small garden seen through the window in the painting's background. For Christians, any garden is a reference to the Garden of Eden, the earthly paradise where Adam and Eve were innocent before disobeying God. This notion of innocence is also reflected in the fact that this is a portrait of the Virgin Mary, who was believed to have never sinned.

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Question

Van_eyck_-_arnolfini_portrait

Figure 1

481px-weyden_madonna_1440

Figure 2

Figure 1 features the dog as a possible symbol of __________.

Answer

Many wealthy women in the middle ages and early modern era kept lap dogs as pets, which were seen as symbols of their motherly caring before they were married. Jan van Eyck places the dog in the middle of his Arnolfini Portrait, making it already a member of this new family.

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Question

Figure 1 Figure 2

300px-hans_holbein__the_younger_-sir_thomas_more-_google_art_project 501px-cromwell_thomas_1eessex_01

Both images above were painted by __________.

Answer

Hans Holbein the Younger was the court painter in England throughout much of the reign of King Henry VIII, a position he was brought to from his native Augsburg through connections with humanists in Northern Europe. These portraits are of two of Henry's advisors, Sir Thomas More (on the left) and Thomas Cromwell. Both bear the distinct elements of Holbein's portrait style, with accessories telling of the subject's life and a sense of perspective providing a remarkable realism for the era.

Figure 1: Portrait of Sir Thomas More by Hans Holbein the Younger (1527)

Figure 2: Portrait of Thomas Cromwell by Hans Holbein the Younger (c. 1533)

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Question

Image A Image B

300px-hans_holbein__the_younger_-sir_thomas_more-_google_art_project 501px-cromwell_thomas_1eessex_01

In the image on the left, the subject's pendant is a symbol of __________.

Answer

The pendant Sir Thomas More is wearing as a necklace in this portrait by Hans Holbein the Younger is a Tudor rose, the symbol of the English House of Tudor established by Henry VII. More was a key advisor to Henry VII's son, Henry VIII, and is shown by Holbein as a loyal subject to his king. Additionally, the round, floral emblem, a mix of the white rose of York and the red rose of Lancaster, was widely used in English society throughout the sixteenth century.

Figure 1: Portrait of Sir Thomas More by Hans Holbein the Younger (1527)

Figure 2: Portrait of Thomas Cromwell by Hans Holbein the Younger (c. 1533)

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Question

Image A Image B

300px-hans_holbein__the_younger_-sir_thomas_more-_google_art_project 501px-cromwell_thomas_1eessex_01

In the drawing on the right, the personal artifacts on the table in front of the image show __________.

Answer

This portrait of Thomas Cromwell by Hans Holbein the Younger presents him as a chief councillor to Henry VIII, King of England. Cromwell was from a relatively minor family, and he made his way to his position through a mixture of hard work and political maneuvering. Holbein presents Cromwell behind a table with books and papers on it to exemplify Cromwell's position despite his background and reputation.

Figure 1: Portrait of Sir Thomas More by Hans Holbein the Younger (1527)

Figure 2: Portrait of Thomas Cromwell by Hans Holbein the Younger (c. 1533)

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