ForumForUs - Andalusia - Dublin - Dogs - DonabatePortrane.com - SwordsDublin.com - NorthCountyDublin.com
Tuscany on

If you log in now, you can:
- post forum messages
- vote on messages
- filter messages

 
Welcome Discussion Maps Sitemap

Visit our forum!
Tuscany
Arezzo
Asciano
Barga
Carrara
Florence
Grosseto
Livorno
Lucca
Pisa
Pistoia
Prato
San Gimignano
Siena
Tuscan Archipelago
Neighbouring Regions
The Arts
- Renaissance
- Italian Renaissance
- Quattrocento
- Uffizi
Artists
Famous Tuscans
Tuscan Wines
Forum
Site map

Quattrocento

The cultural and artistic events of 15th century Italy are collectively referred to as the Quattrocento (from the Italian for 400, or from "mille quattrocento," 1400). Quattrocento encompasses the artistic styles of the late Middle Ages (most notably International Gothic) and the early Renaissance.


Development of Quattrocento styles

Quattrocentro art sheds the decorative mosaics (typically associated with byzantine art along with the Christian and Gothic media of stained glass, frescoes, illuminated manuscripts, and sculpture). Quattrocento artists and sculptors incorporated the more classic forms developed by Roman and Greek sculptors.

Historical context

After the Western decline Roman Empire in 476, economic disorder and disruption of trade spread across Europe, beginning what came to be known as the Dark Ages. The Dark Ages lasted until the 11th century, when trade picked up and the papacy regained its authority.

The European continent slowly evolved from small, highly unstable fiefdoms into larger nation-states ruled by monarchies, thereby providing greater stability. Money replaced land as the medium of exchange, and increasing numbers of serfs became freedmen. The decline of feudalism paved the way for social, cultural, and economic changes.

Importance of Quattrocento

Since the Renassiance developed during the 1400s, Quattrocento lay at the forefront of what was to become a scientific, cultural, social, and economic revolution.

List of Italian Quattrocento artists

Since the Quattrocento overlaps with part of the Renaissance movement, it would be inaccurate to say that a particular artist was Ouattrocento or Renaissance. Artists of the time probably would not have identified themselves as members of a movement.

    1. Leonardo Da Vinci
    2. Domenico Ghirlandaio
    3. Sandro Botticelli
    4. Pietro Perugino
    5. Andrea del Verrocchio
    6. Donatello
    7. Masaccio
    8. Masolino
    9. Filippino Lippi
    10. Andrea Mantegna
    11. Lorenzo Ghiberti
    12. Filippo Brunelleschi
    13. Desiderio da Settignano
    14. Antonio Rossellino
    15. Bertoldo di Giovanni
    16. Della Robbia
    17. Fra Angelico
    18. Paolo Uccello
    19. Andrea del Castagno
    20. Domenico Veneziano
    21. Piero della Francesca
    22. Carlo Crivelli
    23. Andrea Mantegna
    24. Jacopo Bellini
    25. Gentile Bellini
    26. Carpaccio
    27. Giovanni Bellini
    28. Antonello da Messina
    29. Cosimo Tura
    30. Francesco del Cossa
    31. Ercole de' Roberti
    32. Sassetta
    33. Giovanni di Paolo
    34. Francesco di Giorgio
    35. Vecchietta
    36. Luca Signorelli
    37. Antonio Pollaiuolo
    38. Melozzo da Forlì
    39. Benozzo Gozzoli

This article is licenced under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Quattrocento".

 
ForumForUs - Provence - NorthCountyDublin.com - Brittany - Tuscany - Dublin - Cats
Contact us - Disclaimer