Italy established as the main painting producer with three schools:Rome, Florence and Venice. The paintings were initially in tempera or fresco, oil was introduced later.
Low countries like Netherlands contribute with oil paintings mainly, enabling painters to introduce more details as the oil dries slower.
Early Renaissance (1400-1460): During that time authors experienced with perspective and eliminate the "halo" characteristic of the Gothic painting. In Italy 1) Masaccio: Brancacci Chapel frecos(1426. Florence). 2) Mantegna, Piero della Francesca, Paulo Ucello,... In Low Countries Jan van Eyck is essential in Flemish paint. Arnolfini marriage (1434) his most famous paint.
Hight Renaissance: Dürer in Germany,innovating with a linear painting and using engraving.The Rinhoceros(1515) . In Italy 1) Sandro Boticelli. The birth of the venus ( 1480) 2) Leonardo: introduced the pyramid composition:The last supper (1498), the Mona Lisa(1517):challenging the portrait technique known in Italy at the time.
3)Michel Angelo also sculptor painted the ceilings of the Sistine Chapel ( The Vatican) highlighting the Creation of Adam (1511) and the Last Judgement (1536-41). 4) Raphael depicted numerous religious paintings. Madonna of the Pinks (1507). Murals of the Apostolic Chapel ( School of Athens (1508-14).
Titian ( Tiziano Vecellio 1478-1576) the master of colour. He adapted his colour from brilliant characteristic of the venetian high renaissance school to the dark and chiaroscuro characteristic for the barroque painting. Venus and organist and dog (1550), is a good example of the evolution. .
Tintoretto, for some authors is considered a manierist artist. He used light-on-dark technique and strong scultural effect in his creations. See The Crucifixion.Scuola di San Rocco ( 1565).
Manierism continues to be subject of debate among art historians. Is an inbalanced,restless composition and incongruous use of colours with an inchoherent handing of time and space.
Parmigiano. The Madonna of the long neck(1534-40), Jacomo Pontormo. Entombment(1528),El Greco.Burial of the Count of Orgaz(1586)
Some painting techniques were translated to sculpture like the pyramid structure. Experiments with materials like gold,bronze casting ( using the Greek lost wax technique)and marble depicted important characters for the time like condottieri or popes or represented religious or mythology scenes.
Early Renaissance with the experiment of the volume are the masterpieces of Ghiberti in the Florence Bapistery(1425-52) and Donatello with an excellent evolution of the movement and portrait in his Gattemelata on horseback (1453)
The volumes, the light inflected over the materials was experienced by Michael Angelo in the David(1503)who became the symbol of the defense of civil liberties embodied in the Republic of Florence and the Pietat(1498-99), the lamentation translated the pyramid structure of the painting to the sculpture.
the action and the movement was emphasized against emotion.
Benvenuto Cellini sculpted gold and bronce. Perseus with the head of the medusa (1545)shows his dominium of the movement.more dramatic is Giambologna with the rape of the sabine women (1574-82).
Renaissance style places emphasis on symmetry, proportion, geometry and the regularity of parts as they are demonstrated in the architecture of classical antiquity and in particular ancient Roman architecture.
columns, pilasters and lintels, semicircular arches, hemispherical domes, niches substituted the Gothic previous style.
The prime example is the Basilica di San Lorenzo in Florence by Filippo Brunelleschi (1377–1446). The parish church of the Medici. with interior decoration and sculpture by Donatello.
Alberti His facades of the Tempio Malatestiano (Rimini, 1450) and the Church of Santa Maria Novella (Florence, 1470) are based on Roman temple fronts.
Palladio (1508–1580) was the chief architect of the Venetian Republic, writing I quattro libri dell'architettura (Four Books on Architecture,1570). Due to the new demand for villas Palladio specialized in domestic architecture.The villas are centrally planned, drawing on Roman models of country villas. The Villa Emo (Treviso, 1559) and Villa Rotonda (Vicenza, 1566–70).
Freer and more imaginative rhythms and shapes. The best known architect associated with the Mannerist style was Michelangelo (1475–1564), who is credited with inventing the giant order, a large pilaster that stretches from the bottom to the top of a façade.[12] He used this in his design for the Campidoglio in Rome.