Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;
Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;
H to show hint;
A reads text to speech;
9 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
|
View of Haarlem by Jacob van Ruisdael - 1670 - Dutch Baroque; landscape - Plane of land adjusted down
|
|
|
Still Life with Ming Ginger Jar by Willem Kalf - 1669 - Dutch Baroque; still life - Vanitas (momento mori), pocket watch; splendor
|
|
|
Las Meninas by Digeo Velázquez - 1656 - Spanish Baroque - Titian infuence (pentimente, colorito, impasto); suggestion of power
|
|
|
Et in Arcadia Ego by Nicolas Poussin - 1640 - French Baroque - four levels of processing information
|
|
|
Landscape with the Funeral of Phocion - Nicolas Poussin - 1648 - French Baroque - Orderly nature; landscape (rising hill)
|
|
|
Versailles Palace (designed) by Charles LeBrun - begun 1669 - French Baroque - Demonstrates Power of French Monarchy & Louis XIV’s splendor) Control of Nature: east to west axis (sunrise/set), located on marshland
|
|
|
Galerie des Glaces by Charles LeBrun - begun 1678 - French Baroque - Done after glass skills acquired from espionage in Italy
|
|
|
Portrait of Louis XIV by hyacinthe rigaud - 1701 - French Baroque - Rubenistes piece (brushwork: impasto)
|
|
Vanitas (momento mori)
|
term meaning "emptiness," used to describe a still life in which an artist uses one or more mementi mori to remind the viewer of the brevity of life, and consequently of the limited time span in which we may enjoy the pleasures of the senses
|