17th Century Portraits
Art that was produced in northern Europe in the 17th century quite different from the art in southern Europe. This difference was based on the fact that in northern Europe -- particularly in the Netherlands, Germany and Switzerland -- Calvinist approaches to Christianity were the rule. In southern Europe, particularly Italy and Spain, the Catholic Church still held sway, and painters tended to be loyal images that reflected Catholicism.
Why Catholicism was represented in 17th Century Italian Art
In response to the 16th century Protestant Reformation, the Roman Catholic Church launched the Counter-Reformation movement. Within that movement was the Council of Trent, which "…firmly resisted Protestant objections to using images in religious worship…" and art (Kleiner 2013). Author Kleiner writes that the Catholic Church was "…the leading art patron in 17th century Italy," and moreover the central point of much of Italian Baroque art was to "…restore Roman Catholicism's predominance and centrality" (Kleiner 559).
Author Beth Williamson explains that the character of Catholic and Protestant art "Became increasingly defined…" in the 17th century. In areas that had remained devoted to the "old faith" (Catholicism), Christian art was continually commissions as "…a powerful polemical weapon, promoting the Catholic view of Christianity"...
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