Tuesday, April 22, 2025
spot_imgspot_img

Top 5 This Week

spot_img

Related Posts

Renaissance master drawings at the Albertina ยป Art & Antique…


Renaissance master drawings at the Albertina ยป Art & Antique…

From 7 March to 9 June 2025, the Albertina presents the exhibition โ€œLeonardo โ€“ Dรผrer Renaissance master drawings on colored groundโ€

Source: Albertina ยท Image: Leonardo da Vinci, โ€œHalf-Length Figure of an Apostleโ€, 1493-95 (detail)

In the Libro dellโ€™Arte, the famous treatise on painting, Cennino Cennini described drawing in light and dark on colored backgrounds around 1400 as โ€œil principio e la porta del colorireโ€, the beginning and the gateway to painting. A century later, Leonardo would perfect the technique in his grandiose studies of nature. Albrecht Dรผrer followed his example with sheets such as the Praying Hands, one of the most famous works in the art of drawing. With Leonardoโ€™s and Dรผrerโ€™s works, the study in chiaroscuro was finally recognized as a highly artificial art genre.

While the chiaroscuro drawing had a firm place in the work process in Italy, it was favored north of the Alps for delicate scenic depictions from the mid-15th century onwards. These were never design drawings, but precious showpieces. Outstanding examples of this are sheets by Albrecht Altdorfer, Hans Baldung Grien and finally Dรผrerโ€™s famous Green Passion. The many subjects from history, mythology and popular beliefs alone demonstrate that the artists were targeting the desires of a new, educated clientele.

The ALBERTINA Museumโ€™s exhibition uses carefully selected works from its own holdings and topclass loans from international collections to illustrate the functions of color ground drawings in the South and the North, the expressive possibilities the technique offered artists and the links to contemporary printmaking. It will offer visitors a special aesthetic pleasure and reveal to laymen and connoisseurs alike how master draughtsmen such as Leonardo and Dรผrer pushed the door to painting wide open and crossed the threshold to art for artโ€™s sake.



Source link

Popular Articles