This lesson contains 34 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 2 videos.
Lesson duration is: 50 min
Items in this lesson
Master of art
Slide 1 - Slide
The dutch golden age
Dutch Golden Age painting is the painting of the Dutch Golden Age, a period in Dutch history roughly spanning the 17th century
The new Dutch Republic was the most prosperous nation in Europe and led European trade, science, and art.
A distinctive feature of the period is the emergence of distinct genres of paintings, with the majority of artists producing the bulk of their work within one of these.
Slide 2 - Slide
Finding your niche
The widely held theory of the "hierarchy of genres" in painting, whereby some types were regarded as more prestigious than others, led many painters to want to produce history painting. However this was the hardest to sell, as even Rembrandt found. Many were forced to produce portraits or genre scenes, which sold much more easily.
the categories in the hierarchy were:
history painting, including allegories and popular religious subjects.
Portrait painting, including the tronie
genre painting or scenes of everyday life
landscape, including seascapes, battlescenes, cityscapes, and ruins
still life
Slide 3 - Slide
What soort of painting would you order if you'd live in the Golden age?
Slide 4 - Mind map
A
history painting, including allegories and popular religious subjects.
B
genre painting or scenes of
everyday life
C
Portrait painting,
including the tronie
D
landscape, including seascapes, battlescenes, cityscapes, and ruins
Slide 5 - Quiz
A
history painting, including allegories and popular religious subjects.
B
genre painting or scenes of
everyday life
C
Portrait painting,
including the tronie
D
landscape, including seascapes, battlescenes, cityscapes, and ruins
Slide 6 - Quiz
A
history painting, including allegories and popular religious subjects.
B
genre painting or scenes of
everyday life
C
Portrait painting,
including the tronie
D
landscape, including seascapes, battlescenes, cityscapes, and ruins
Slide 7 - Quiz
A
history painting, including allegories and popular religious subjects.
B
genre painting or scenes of
everyday life
C
Portrait painting,
including the tronie
D
landscape, including seascapes, battlescenes, cityscapes, and ruins
Slide 8 - Quiz
A
history painting, including allegories and popular religious subjects.
B
genre painting or scenes of
everyday life
C
Portrait painting,
including the tronie
D
landscape, including seascapes, battlescenes, cityscapes, and ruins
Slide 9 - Quiz
A
history painting, including allegories and popular religious subjects.
B
genre painting or scenes of
everyday life
C
Portrait painting,
including the tronie
D
landscape, including seascapes, battlescenes, cityscapes, and ruins
Slide 10 - Quiz
Landscape
Born in Amsterdam, Hendrick Avercamp (1585-1634) grew up in Kampen. He lived and worked there from 1614 until his death in 1634. Avercamp is mentioned in various documents as the Kampen Mute, so it is assumed that he was deaf and dumb. Avercamp specialised in winter landscapes. He adopted the Flemish tradition. Avercamp's early landscapes have a clear narrative in style and later, his work acquired a more atmospheric quality.
Slide 11 - Slide
Slide 12 - Slide
What does the word Narrative mean in this art context?
A
With lots of details
B
Telling a story
C
True to life
D
A winter landscape
Slide 13 - Quiz
Narrative
The paintings are narrative, with many anecdotes. For instance, included in the painting "Winter landscape with skaters" are several lively details or little jokes: a couple making love, naked buttocks, and a peeing male.
Slide 14 - Slide
Depth
Avercamp used the painting technique of aerial perspective.
The depth is suggested by change of color in the distance.
To the front objects are painted in richer colors, such as trees or a boat, while farther objects are lighter.
This technique strengthens the impression of depth in the painting.
Slide 15 - Slide
Forms of showing depth on a flat surface
Slide 16 - Mind map
Depth
Aerial perspective: colours become less vibrant the farther away they are
Linear perspective: a system where all parallel lines converge in a single vanishing point on the composition's horizon line.
Overlap: objects are placed in front of each other
Placement/Stacking: objects are placed higher to appear farther away
Diminisching scale/detail: objects are smaller and less details when farther away.
Slide 17 - Slide
A
Overlap
B
Placement/Stacking
C
Diminishing
scale/detail
D
linear perspective.
Slide 18 - Quiz
A
Overlap
B
Placement/Stacking
C
Diminishing
scale/detail
D
linear perspective.
Slide 19 - Quiz
A
Overlap
B
Placement/Stacking
C
Diminishing
scale/detail
D
linear perspective.
Slide 20 - Quiz
A
Overlap
B
Placement/Stacking
C
Diminishing
scale/detail
D
aerial perspective.
Slide 21 - Quiz
A
Overlap
B
Placement/Stacking
C
Diminishing
scale/detail
D
aerial perspective.
Slide 22 - Quiz
Slide 23 - Video
Slide 24 - Slide
How can you see these two were very wealthy
Slide 25 - Mind map
Slide 26 - Video
Slide 27 - Slide
Rembrant and Caravaggio
Rembrandt was highly inspired by Caravaggio's use of light and dark.
We use the Italian word Chiaroscuro this roughly means, “light and dark.”
In French this is Clair Obscure.
Slide 28 - Slide
Contrast in light and dark
Chiaroscuro or Clair Obscure: a big contrast in light and dark
Repoussoir: the light is pushed back or surrounded by dark
Look at the pictures and choose if its clair obscure or repoussoir.
Slide 29 - Slide
A
Chiaroscuro
B
Repoussoir
Slide 30 - Quiz
A
Chiaroscuro
B
Repoussoir
Slide 31 - Quiz
A
Chiaroscuro
B
Repoussoir
Slide 32 - Quiz
A
Chiaroscuro
B
Repoussoir
Slide 33 - Quiz
For now the end of the lesson
next week we'll discuss:
the baroque period in art history
Composition
and movement
Homework:
Look for a picture of a figure piece from the Baroque
Take a good look at the proportions and try to sketch it.