MannerismThe term comes from the Italian maniera, or "style," in the sense of an artist's characteristic "touch" or recognizable "manner." Mannerism is a useful designation for those aspects of the late Renaissance arts (1530-1580), whose proponents sought to create dramatic and dynamic effects by depicting figures with elongated forms and in exaggerated, out-of-balance poses in manipulated irrational space, lit with unrealistic lighting. Mannerism Artists: Aachen, Hans von Allori, Alessandro Arcimboldo, Giuseppe Barocci, Federico Bassano, Francesco Bassano, Leandro Da Ponte Beccafumi, Domenico Berruguete, Alonso Bloemaert, Abraham Bronzino, Agnolo Campi, Vincenzo Caron, Antoine Clouet, Francois Correggio Crespi, Giovanni Battista Greco, El Masters of the Fontainebleau Michelangelo Buonarroti Niccolo dell'Abbate Parmigianino Piombo, Sebastiano del Pirro Ligorio Pontormo, Jacopo da Carucci Primaticcio, Francesco Romano, Giulio Rosso Fiorentino, Giovanni Battista di Jacopo Savoldo, Giovanni Girolamo Tintoretto Vasari, Giorgio Veronese, Paolo Vos, Maarten de |
|
|