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Academic literature on the topic 'Peinture de la Renaissance – Italie – Venise (Italie)'
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Journal articles on the topic "Peinture de la Renaissance – Italie – Venise (Italie)"
Bolard, Laurent. "Le paysage toscan, métaphore du Paradis. Littérature et peinture en Italie à la fin du Moyen Âge et à la Renaissance." Littératures 46, no. 1 (2002): 91–107. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/litts.2002.2187.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Peinture de la Renaissance – Italie – Venise (Italie)"
Bouvrande, Isabelle. "La critique du lieu aristotélicien à la Renaissance : diaphane, atopie, et colorito, ou les enjeux du visible dans la peinture vénitienne du Cinquecento." Tours, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002TOUR2020.
Full textBonneau-Gaze, Odette-Anne. "Recherche sur le récit peint dans les Scuole Grandi de Venise entre XV et XVIème siècle ou la Quarta Dimensione du réalisme narratif." Paris 4, 1991. http://www.theses.fr/1990PA040177.
Full textStauss, Dimitri. "Vers une compréhension des origines de Caravage : l'influence vénitienne par rapport à l'influence lombarde à travers le contexte historique, social et religieux du XVIe siècle." Montpellier 3, 2009. http://www.biu-montpellier.fr/florabium/jsp/nnt.jsp?nnt=2009MON30087.
Full textThis thesis deals with the problems of the Venetian influence in the paintings of Caravaggio. The different features of the art of Michelangelo Merisi are analysed and systematically compared to the Venetian's references, but also Lombards, Florentines and Romans. The social, religious and cultural contexts are also presented, as to highlight the major influence of literature, philosophy, theology, along with painter's acquaintances, influences wich are not merely pictorials. Firstly we paid particular attention to the artistic, political and religious in which the painter was immersed in Milano. The problem of the hypothetical journey in Venice is also treated. Then, we study the relative questions with regards to the chiaroscuro, to colour, to the drawings, to the landscapes, to the faces and to their natural effects shapes but also to their possible Venetian source. Lastly we use examples and comparisons with the main painters of the Serenissima such as Giorgione, Titian or Tintoret, in order to concretely define if one can establish any link between them and Caravaggio. It is essential to study the Lombard painting and the artists of the region of Milano whose influence was upmost primordial. Our study aims to establish the progress of research on the painter, but also to the offer links and interpretations so as the study progress
Campagne, Ibarcq Claudie. "Tels serviteurs, tels maîtres : la représentation des domestiques dans la peinture vénitienne de la Renaissance." Paris, EHESS, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015EHES0051.
Full textRenaissance Venetian paintings include many servants, who often escape the notice of those who view them. A systematic statistical inventory of those servant figures and their grouping into different categories have made it obvious that those figures are hardly ever realistic or decorative but are most of the time an integral part of a symbolic system focusing on their masters' place in society and of the elite's conception of its social role, in particular during the more aristocratic second half of the sixteenth century. On the other hand, servant figures may be used to express views on varied subjects, either literary, theological or political, or even with an artistic or satirical goal in mind. Indeed, servants, figures of the popolo, have a legitimate place in pictorial representation in a city such as Venice where the Patricians like to think of the community as united. The systematic study of servants in painting has also led to a new questioning of well-known works when they include servant figures which differ from traditional or contemporary norms. The study of those discrepancies has shed a new light on those works by Carpaccio, Titian, Tintoretto and Veronese
Jolivet, Anna. "Représentations de l'école vénitienne en France au XIXe siècle : une écriture de l'histoire de l'art entre enjeux artistiques, scientifiques et idéologiques." Phd thesis, Université Michel de Montaigne - Bordeaux III, 2012. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00779462.
Full textHochmann, Michel. "Peintres et commanditaires a venise (1541-1628)." Paris 4, 1986. http://www.theses.fr/1986PA040324.
Full textThis work tries to show in which context the venetian painters of the sixteenth century worked : in its first part, we define the social position of the artists, and the functionning of the workshop and of the corporation (the scuola dei dipintori). We analyze the various contracts between painters and patrons and study the making of the price of the pictures. The second part of this work shows what were the contacts between painters and letterati; and the importance of the venetian art theory. The third part evocates the most important patrons and amateurs of the period, their collections and their taste. The last part analyzes the great works ordered by the scuole and the churches and the influence of the ecclesiastics rules on the painters' productions
Lesage, Claire. "La culture et la condition féminines chez les femmes lettrées à Venise (fin de la Renaissance, début de l'époque baroque)." Paris 3, 1995. http://www.theses.fr/1995PA030102.
Full textOur research is dedicated to the study of the feminine literature in venice at the end of the renaissance and at the beginning of the baroque period. We selected four writers' works whose names are : isabella cortese, moderata fonte, lucrezia marinella and arcangela tarabotti. We studied their writings with an historical porspect in order to witness the feminine condition within the italian ociety of thius time. In a stylistic prospect, our second purpose was to evaluate the influence of the litarary models and these writers' capacity to put their own touch, as women, into their writings. We could realize the existence of a thought about their status as women of letters and about the feminine condition in general. It results in a claiming message which is particularly modern
Lacouture, Fabien. "Représenter l'enfant en Italie du Nord et Italie centrale : XIVe - XVIe siècles." Thesis, Paris 1, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017PA01H020.
Full textAlthough childhood is "a universal anthropological conception" (E. Deschavanne, P.H. Tavoillot, Philosophie des âges de la vie), the French historian Philippe Ariès, in Centuries of Childhood: A Social History of Family Life (1962), proposed that the recognition of childhood as a distinct stage of life, what he calls the "sentiment de l'enfance," did not exist during the Middle Ages and early modern period, but was rather the invention of the 16th- and especially the 17th and 18th centuries. Disproved by historians, but still considered valid by some art historians, this theory is founded upon a study of pictorial representations of children. Images of children are numerous in Northern- and Central Italian Renaissance painting, but they require a new approach on how children were perceived and pictured. A precise analysis of these visual representations, of their genesis, condition, and their destination(s) is necessary. Such a study naturally finds its structure in the traditional "stages of life" and "periods of childhood" in use during the Renaissance. These categories are: infanzia (from birth to seven years old), puerizia (from seven to approximately twelve to fourteen years) and adolescenza (from twelve to fourteen), during all of which the child was in constant evolution. Beyond simply seeing children as decorative pictorial motifs, by exploring the genre of the work studied, its backstory, and also the age, the gender, or the social status of the child pictured, this tack (approach?) enables us to better understand the purposes of children's pictorial representation
Maisonneuve, Cécile. "Peindre à Florence dans le quartier de l'Oltrarno entre Gothique tardif et première Renaissance." Paris, EPHE, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006EPHE4012.
Full textThe Oltrarno, the south district of Florence was in the fifteenth century a meeting place for the patrons and painters who lived there and who contributed to the decoration of the churches around which their social life was organised. This study is about the men who were brought together by the creation of works of art, their identities and relationships. It restores some forgotten masters, defines the context in which better known painters moved and confirms the link between generations of artists traditionally separated by the formal gap between Gothic and Renaissance
Lemoine, Annick. "Nicolas Régnier (Maubeuge, vers 1588-Venise, 1667) : un peintre et marchand de tableaux dans l'Italie du XVIIe siècle." Paris 4, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004PA040237.
Full textNicolas Régnier was born in Maubeuge around 1588. He did his apprenticeship in Antwerp and spent the rest of his life in Italy : at the Farnese Court in Parma, in Rome under the aegis of Manfredi and finally in Venice where he became known not only as a painter but also as an art dealer and a connoisseur. Today, Régnier remains relatively unknown in spite of Voss’s study in 1924 and of the more recent one by Fantelli in 1974. It is now possible, in the light of a new biography of Régnier and of the catalogue raisonné of his works, to reconsider his position in the Caravaggesque movement and his role as an innovator in 17th century Venetian painting. By the study of his commercial activities together with his important collection of old masters, scattered not long before his death (1667), we are now able to reinstate Régnier as a connoisseur and a great art dealer
Books on the topic "Peinture de la Renaissance – Italie – Venise (Italie)"
Mythologie et maniérisme: Italie-Bavière-Fontainebleau-Prague : peinture et dessins. Paris: A. Michel, 1985.
Find full textLowry, Martin. Le monde d'Alde Manuce: Imprimeurs, hommes d' affaires et intellectuels dans la Venise de la Renaissance. Paris: Promodis/Editions du Cercle de la librairie, 1989.
Find full textMusée du Petit Palais (Paris, France). Flore en Italie: Symbolique et representation de la flore dans la peinture italienne du Moyen-ǎge et de la Renaissance. Paris: Musée du Petit Palais, 1991.
Find full text1488-1576, Titian ca, Giorgione 1477-1511, Fage Gilles, and Grand Palais (Paris France), eds. Le Siècle de Titien: L'âge d'or de la peinture à Venise. 2nd ed. Paris: Réunion des Musées nationaux, 1993.
Find full textLe siecle de Titien: L'age d'or de la peinture à Venise. Paris: Reunion des Musees Nationaux, 1993.
Find full textMusée du Petit Palais (Avignon, France)., ed. Flore en Italie: I. Parcours floral : symbolique et représentation de la flore dans la peinture italienne du Moyen-âge et de la Renaissance. [Avignon: Musée du Petit Palais, 1991.
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