Renaissance Art
The relationship between patronage and art
During Early and High Renaissance of Italy, it was through the vehicle of patronage was the key fashion in which an artist established his artistic identity as well as established himself economically. For instance, in considering Botticelli's "The Birth of Venus," it is important to remember that this vision is not an individualistic picture of a an artist living outside of his society. Rather, the patron who commissioned the Botticelli painting for his country villa was a member of the rich and powerful family of the Medici, and demanded that certain artistic standards and ideals be reflected in the work. (Sandro Bottecelli, Webart, "The Birth of Venus (http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/botticelli/venus/)
The Medici family had a fascination not so much with tale of Venus, but with the Neoplatonic philosophy of beauty this female form had the potential to represent. Venus, it was thought, and all beautifual and idealized human forms were supposed to be the "symbols of mystery through which the divine message of beauty came into the world." The harmonious nature of the composition of Venus combined with the lack of solidity of the figures in the work celebratates the beauty of the woman's form and the Medici's belief in a Neoplatonic world of the mythic forms whereby which understanding beauty, human beings understand the truth of God bathed in golden light. Bottecelli made this philosophy visual in his works.
In contrast, Jan Van Eyck's famous 1434 "The Arnolfini Wedding" seems at first glance seem to come from another time frame as well as a different nation. Even though merely originates from the Northern part of Europe during the Renasance instead of using images to embody the ideals of his patrons, real individuals are portrayed, although they are also used as symbolic entities. In the Northern Rennsaiance, patrons desired that artists give themselves as real individuals significant, cultural markings of greatness, such as the women's padded fertility in...
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