When not hard at work writing she can be found dressing up for steampunk parties and Renaissance fairs, or with her nose buried in a book. |
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From the Renaissance onwards, study of the natural realm was increasingly distinguished from metaphysics. |
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The overall impression of the early rooms is of a sybaritic indulgence which echoes the richness and confidence of Venetian Renaissance society. |
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This motif had already gained currency in the naturalistic representations of Renaissance artists. |
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One of the first things to note about The Westin Tokyo is its extensive events facilities, which include a Renaissance chapel and Shinto Hall. |
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A true Renaissance man, he surprised us with his versatility and non-art related talents. |
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A true Renaissance man, he is described by biographers as an artist, poet, writer, journalist, linguist, naturalist, and philosopher. |
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The Onion A.V. Club recently spoke to Yoakam about the state of country music, his upbringing, and his lifestyle as a Renaissance man. |
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He has earned recognition as a Renaissance man through his contributions to the worlds of photography, film, literature, music and poetry. |
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A true Renaissance man, Beck has risen to international acclaim for his sculpture, as well as his abstract and figurative paintings. |
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Now he is played by John Malkovich, with the sophistication of a Renaissance man, grown rich on other people's ignorance. |
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This ambitiously conceived and lavishly presented exhibition aims to celebrate the whole range of Venetian Renaissance art. |
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His approach reflects a nostalgia for the gloriously learned mind and limber memory of a retrospectively constructed Renaissance reader. |
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He's a Renaissance man who is incredibly well-read, draws upon an enormous breadth of experience, and has an astonishing memory. |
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Among his medieval and Renaissance characters, Shakespeare seems to associate a belief in astrology with light-mindedness. |
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In Renaissance Europe the stick became straighter, and a wooden frog was wedged between stick and hair to hold them apart at the heel. |
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It marked a watershed in Renaissance art and established Michelangelo as the foremost sculptor of his time. |
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For it, he drew on Renaissance technical terms, derivations, compounds, archaisms, polysemy, etymological meanings, and idioms. |
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Much has been made of Smyth's family background, for he is the son of Renaissance art historian Craig Hugh Smyth and was brought up in Italy. |
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Also featured will be works from the Byzantine, Medieval, and Renaissance periods, as well as late 18th and early 19th century art. |
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Armor reflected the Renaissance idealization of the antique, with decorative motifs taken from classical mythology and ancient history. |
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Craven District Council has mooted the idea of creating a one-stop shop for council services as part of the Renaissance Town project. |
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On the day we performed, Italian artists in full Renaissance regalia offered opera, folk dances and other historical entertainment. |
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The Accademia gallery is to Venetian painting what the Uffizi is to Renaissance art in Florence. |
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The rise of maiolica during the Italian Renaissance signaled a change in the perception and purpose of ceramic wares. |
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Apart from foliate designs, Renaissance patterns diffused relatively slowly through northern Europe and Spain. |
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The objects he purchased included a Henri II boiserie, an iron gate from the Chateau de Versailles, and Italian Renaissance furniture. |
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She goes from a pretty, minimally maquillaged twenty-something to a golden-cheeked Renaissance maiden. |
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All of this gives an untimely ring to Jorg Traeger's impassioned apology for Renaissance art as a religious art. |
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Possessing a high forehead and pale skin was the most important factor of Renaissance beauty. |
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The human body was the main preoccupation of High Renaissance artists and they often depicted it nude. |
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She developed her early attraction to painting after discovering the Renaissance masters during a childhood trip to Italy. |
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The Bargello stitch was also a popular canvaswork style since the Renaissance era until the early XVIIth century. |
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This presaged the mathematisation of nature of Renaissance humanists, engineers and magicians. |
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Narrow streets, Renaissance palaces, and baroque churches give Mala Strana its present charm. |
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Many people are producing Shakespeare hypertext CD-ROMs and Shakespeare Web sites, as well as on-line sources for other Renaissance materials. |
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The subjects of his art are pop culture, not the fleshy Renaissance portraits of his predecessors. |
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Needless to say, recalling this episode in the historiography of German Renaissance studies is not to validate it. |
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His acquisitions included Chinese porcelains, medieval and Renaissance paintings, and rare books, especially on religion. |
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It is lavishly furnished with outstanding collections such as Chinese porcelain and Renaissance paintings. |
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The Romantic movement renewed the interest in the mad genius that had been cultivated by Renaissance Platonism but dampened by the age of reason. |
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Similar prophecies had frequently surfaced in Italian millenarian movements during the late medieval and Renaissance periods. |
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She wandered over to admire a Renaissance painting hanging in the near corner of the huge room. |
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There was a classic Renaissance look about him, as if some female sculptor had lovingly chiseled his features out of marble. |
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An exercise in Renaissance perspective, the picture easily holds its own against the religious imagery surrounding it. |
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Religious instruction formed much of the early impetus for the creation of Renaissance art. |
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The rebirth implied by the concept of the Renaissance had reference to classical learning. |
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He has written the first monographic analysis of the complete corpus of the late Renaissance Calabrian friar and naturalist philosopher. |
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Now 30, he's recently been awarded the accolade of Renaissance Man For The Millennium, though he doesn't seem too chuffed about it. |
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He has crafted Renaissance and baroque lutes, theorbos, chitarrones, archlutes, and classical guitars. |
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An ancient diary tells them that the location of a hidden crypt that has been ciphered within the pages of the Renaissance text. |
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He read Latin and Italian literature, and he promoted Renaissance humanism in England. |
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If there is any one aspect of the Renaissance that can be said to have been characteristic, that must surely be the movement known as humanism. |
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In literature, the Renaissance was led by humanist scholars and poets, notably Petrarch, Dante, and Boccaccio in Italy. |
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Cultural repression facilitated by decorum lies at the root of the humanistic classicism informing the Renaissance sketchbooks. |
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One of the major characteristics of this Renaissance was the rediscovery of numerous Latin classics. |
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Architecture after about 1580 was inspired by medieval ideals of chivalry as much as by Renaissance classicism. |
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Beaton posed the hollow-eyed Warhol between to pretty, bare-chested boys in a pastiche of a Renaissance painting. |
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Yet, being multipartite, they call to mind the predella panels of early Renaissance altarpieces. |
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A whistle-stop tour of the home of Renaissance painting, by gondola, vaporetto and on foot, with Sir Tim as our indefatigable guide. |
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The House with the Renaissance boscage portal is connected with the birth of the Pilsen's beer fame. |
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The filmmakers' desire to create an unstuffy, modern version of the Renaissance monarch merely turns him into a boorish, violent plug-ugly. |
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In the Renaissance garden, elemental forces of nature were represented by fountains, statuary, and artificial grottoes. |
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Late Renaissance and Elizabethan writers also found Vergil a good source of inspiration. |
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So in essence we have three mythological love stories, each of which came to be emblematically linked in the Renaissance to a different art. |
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In Renaissance underwear, there is no really specific formula for how big or small gussets must be. |
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Such music would probably have sounded disturbingly out of tune to Renaissance ears. |
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He has just been expatiating on the difference between Renaissance and Romantic angst. |
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Books on Italian Renaissance prints do not come along very often, and when they do, as likely as not they are catalogues. |
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This antinomy, perceived by reason and resolved by faith, is the standard paradox of Renaissance humanism, and we have met it in many shapes. |
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Sarah Monette is writing her doctoral thesis on ghosts in English Renaissance revenge tragedy. |
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Ben Franklin drubs Thomas Jefferson in the race to be our nation's foremost Renaissance man. |
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These objects represent the seven liberal arts that provided the basis of a Renaissance education. |
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The Cittern, a Renaissance instrument that may be a descendent of the citole, is equipped with metal strings. |
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There is almost no rhetorical verse of the kind we find in Augustan Latin and later in Renaissance poetry throughout Europe. |
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It is called Renaissance or Brussels lace because it is mostly sold in Brussels. |
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Alain Locke's role as a general factotum of the Harlem Renaissance has tended to overshadow the full dimensions of an active and productive life. |
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It was a mighty Renaissance palace, magnificently remodeled in baroque style for the future Frederick I of Prussia. |
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Vividly described are some pictures centrally important for Renaissance conceits such as the proximity of pleasure and the pox. |
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The architrave of a perfect Renaissance arch has rotted to the texture of old peach stone. |
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Alberti's early architectural career is a good example of the gulf between the theory and practice of Renaissance architecture. |
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To be sure, the public prayer forms of the West needed culling and refining by the late medieval and early Renaissance periods. |
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The seminar's topic was Renaissance utopian literatures, focusing on More's Utopia. |
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The great innovations in Ottoman arts and crafts owed nothing to the example of Renaissance models. |
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The artisanal workshops of the Middle Ages and Renaissance offer countless examples of painters who declined to reveal their working methods. |
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Or maybe it is her masterful use of gold inlay, a technique derived from Renaissance artists. |
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It was in the Renaissance that personal portraiture first became an art form in its own right. |
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The Renaissance in Europe was a remarkable period of artistic, cultural, and intellectual activity. |
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Pure neoclassicism now lost ground to Italian Renaissance styles, more adaptable to modern uses. |
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The game includes a deck of 30 museum-quality playing cards and a full-color, 80-page art book, packaged in a Renaissance treasure box. |
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She asserts that the music from this period demands a style of singing not unlike that of the Renaissance madrigals. |
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In contrast to the reverse perspective of Yamato-e, Renaissance methods simulated nature, as the eye would see it. |
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With its small garden courtyard, the club looked, from the outside, more like an inconspicuous Renaissance home than a den of dance iniquity. |
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Christ stands under a Renaissance arcade with all'antica design and offers the host to his Apostles. |
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Medieval and Renaissance history get some attention, but ancient history gets relatively short shrift. |
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He may have once been described as a Renaissance man in times less commercial. |
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Do you think you were fuelled by the fact that he is a fellow Renaissance man? |
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A true Renaissance man, Wagoner is an army veteran and pharmacist as well as a professional dancer and choreographer. |
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However, he never doubted his genius as a Renaissance man or the importance of his work for future generations. |
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Works by renowned writers of the Harlem Renaissance were shelved alongside little known, self-published authors. |
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I became interested in Renaissance while studying for the tripos in Cambridge. |
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Clearly, the Italian Renaissance continues to exert a powerful hold on historical imagination. |
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White is careful not to allow performance studies to overwhelm textual approaches to Renaissance drama. |
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I wanted them to feast at the banquet of life's recreations, to have the Renaissance childhood not provided to me. |
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Rather than High Renaissance men in tights, English Touring Theatre's Romeo And Juliet starts with men in fights. |
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His travels had given him a wide knowledge of ancient, medieval, and Renaissance art. |
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Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who was quite the Renaissance man himself, created the character and his many stories. |
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The Renaissance was, as its name implies, a period of renewal, invention, and rejuvenation of both music and instruments. |
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With the arrival of the Sforza in the mid-15th century, Milan began to develop a Renaissance style, at times directly imported from Tuscany. |
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His revisionist interpretation of the Renaissance had an electrifying effect on other French scholars active during the last decade of the nineteenth century. |
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The Renaissance Italians also had an acute insight into the importance of the balance of power for maintaining international order among themselves. |
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Sure, Flavin was no polymath, no Renaissance man, though he did share with Leonardo an empiricist's preoccupation with light and its effect on perception. |
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In 2010 Wade completed work on his African Renaissance Monument, a 160-foot bronze statue overlooking Dakar. |
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In Renaissance Italy, he became a student of Titian in Venice, liberating himself from the conventions of icon painting and developing a new fluency with brush and color. |
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This embedded chain of monuments builds a meaningful sequence of events, turning the wild nature of death into mythical history based on Renaissance topoi and Homeric myth. |
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Although many late Renaissance dances comprised three strains, binary form came to be used in nearly all dance movements in 17th and 18th-century dance suites. |
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Partly it is because many Renaissance humanists for their part were indifferent to or even opposed the scholastic natural philosophy and medicine of their time. |
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The most powerful impulse of the time can be summed up as neoclassicism, a reversion to the purist attempts of the Renaissance to reproduce classical models. |
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Here one finds the museum's permanent collection of old masters, including noteworthy Renaissance and Baroque paintings from the Italian, German and Netherlandish schools. |
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The hill has been built upon since the 10th century, and almost every style of architecture is represented upon it, from Romanesque to Gothic to Renaissance to Baroque. |
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Art education, based on Renaissance ideals of humanistic emancipation and professional excellence, had become an instrument of cultural conservatism. |
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One would be hard pressed to find a group of Renaissance prints less like Mantegna's than the six chiaroscuro woodcuts of Apostles by Domenico Beccafumi. |
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To say that the Black Death ended and the Renaissance began is not only a simplification, but incorrect. |
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Lee makes a convincing case that the loveliness of much Renaissance art is inversely related to the moral ugliness of its patrons. |
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The vaulted dining room on the ground-floor of a Renaissance palazzo is archetypally Florentine, with its white walls and grey cornices of pietra serena. |
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Decked with Gothic windows, Renaissance loggias and Baroque stairways, the city's public spaces emulate the comfortable stride and swagger of Shakespeare's stage Italy. |
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After brief runs in community theater and college, she hit the road with a Renaissance fair troupe. |
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He was in one sense a classical, Renaissance playwright, but his was a classicism that used and abused the classics rather than felt itself hidebound by them. |
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From the early Renaissance on, they had been admired and drawn by painters and sculptors and carefully described and cataloged by art enthusiasts and antiquarians. |
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Over the next 50 years, from a series of curatorial and directorial posts, he built up holdings in the area of medieval and Renaissance sculpture. |
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Egyptian pharaohs wore enameled jewelry, and the process was used to decorate metallic objects with color throughout the Middle Ages and Renaissance in Western Europe. |
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Changes in war, government, and economy made the chivalrous, aristocratic knight obsolete and the Renaissance made classical literature more popular. |
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Since the work first appeared in the records of the collection of the Borghese family in the 1790s, it has been attributed to various Renaissance artists. |
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The result is a rough, somewhat rumpled yet charming face, like a Renaissance aristocrat, unshaven and in stockinged feet, caught between the bedroom and the bath. |
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He was a Renaissance man of the Victorian era who had made his fortune through the manufacture of leather girdles, horse collars, or some such thing. |
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Notoriously single-minded, the erstwhile enfant terrible of the Belgian art world is a Renaissance man, despite his penchant for drenching everything in body fluids. |
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But the flaws and peccadilloes of Renaissance artists like Michelangelo pale beside the misdeeds of patrons and pontiffs. |
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But anyone wanting the splendor and sordidness of the Renaissance will not be disappointed. |
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Out of the art of the High Renaissance there developed a style characterized by a sense of extreme elegance and grace, which became known as Mannerism. |
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Lincoln was very much a Renaissance man, not unlike Thomas Jefferson. |
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Both schools produced noble and distinguished work in Renaissance music. |
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Surely Dee's studies were such as to qualify him as a Saturnian, a representative of the Renaissance revaluation of melancholy as the temperament of inspiration. |
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The ensemble was established to explore a very varied repertoire for the brass quintet, through a wide-ranging selection of music from Renaissance to twentieth Century. |
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If Imperial Rome had remained faithful to the style of ancient Greece with its vast, lavish buildings, then the Renaissance also favoured this classical style. |
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When you meet him, he's this very odd combination of literate Renaissance man and oafish uncle who says embarrassing things that you wish your girlfriend hadn't heard. |
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The European Renaissance population was increasingly urbanized and divorced from traditional folk remedies, allowing caffeine beverages to be introduced as exotic medicinals. |
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Shakespeare's work has been produced since the Renaissance in all artistic mediums from the original theater to opera, symphony, film, and ballet. |
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Dr Sunderman was a Renaissance man with accomplishments as a physician, clinical scientist, toxicologist, author, editor, violinist, poet, and photographer. |
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Today the museum contains examples of Italian, French, Dutch, Flemish, English, and Spanish paintings executed between the early Renaissance and the early twentieth century. |
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The complete dominance of the composition by the figures, themselves projected on so heroic a scale, was a major influence on the course of High Renaissance art. |
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The tyranny associated by Renaissance humanists with the age of chivalric knights and with the knight figure caused romances that heroize the bygone age to fall into disfavor. |
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Only if one accepts the claims of the naturalness of Renaissance artificial perspective can we accept photography as a mimetic representation of the world. |
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English painters had relatively little contact with Italy, and were decidedly not working in the Italian Renaissance tradition of perspective and chiaroscuro. |
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Another marked difference between the bassoon and the dulcian is that as was common with other Renaissance instruments, it came in a consort or family. |
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In fact, we now know that Newton was in many ways a Renaissance man, working in theology, prophecy, and alchemy, as well as mathematics, optics, and physics. |
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Well, there is certainly ego in the Renaissance artists and, further back, in the self-promotion of a salesman such as Columbus. |
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In Renaissance Venice wives were free to bequeath their dowries to whom they willed, whereas in Florence they were required by law to leave them to their children or husband. |
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As in many Renaissance antiphonaries, the prominence of the large historiated initial T and the profuse border decoration have reduced the text to a few verses. |
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It also looks gorgeous with its versatile setting of four tiered palazzo arches by Simon Pastukh and fantasticated Renaissance costumes by Galina Solovyeva. |
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There were no terms in the Renaissance for what, since the eighteenth century, have been construed as essential signs in the body of incommensurable difference. |
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Though the arrangement seems at first to be a chronological one, dating from the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s, the grouping is actually methodological. |
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The popularity of this model of imitation is reflected in the various metaphors that Renaissance and Baroque authors generated to describe the process. |
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But this Ciceronian ideal, vividly though it is expressed in the art and literature of Renaissance Italy, came by the end of the century to seem nothing more than a fantasy. |
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He was a Renaissance man in a world filled with teeming mediocrity. |
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The winner received a bursary to enable the study in Rome for three years of the best examples of Antique and Renaissance art while lodging at the French Academy there. |
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A tabletop bronze of a boy pulling a thorn from his foot, made around 1500 by the Renaissance sculptor known as Antico. |
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In many respects Charron was a pure sceptic, whose criticisms of Aristotelian philosophy were among the most cogent produced by the Renaissance sceptics. |
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It was a conscious construction, an amalgam of Middle Eastern melismata and rhythms, Renaissance modality, and, oddly enough, Baroque counterpoint. |
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Jean Burton tells Helen the story of this Renaissance man who was a great figure of Lincolnshire life, and had a huge impact on the landscape of the county. |
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Schuller launched his ministry in a drive-in theatre, but his architectural ambition matched that of a Renaissance Pope. |
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He is one of the most controversial of the Renaissance popes, partly because he acknowledged fathering several children by his mistresses. |
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The African Renaissance Monument built in 2010 in Dakar is the tallest statue in Africa. |
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Medical catastrophes were more common in the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance than they are today. |
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During the period of the Renaissance from the mid 1450s onward, there were many advances in medical practice. |
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Occasionally, there are cutaways to Renaissance or Baroque paintings of Passion events by Rembrandt, Holbein, Darer and others. |
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The Renaissance image known as the Vitruvian Man represented a symbolic and mathematical exploration of the human form as world axis. |
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In the end, Gitana took first place and Renaissance could only manage a fourth, behind Masirah and Ecover. |
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This was a highly mobile, demographically expanding society, fueled by the rapidly expanding Renaissance commerce. |
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The itinerary reminds us that no English Renaissance pastoralist served Marvell as Spenser served Milton. |
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Talvacchia explains that the Renaissance viewer valued the concetto above all else. |
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Developments in medicine during the Renaissance played a fundamental part in the process of extinction of Galenism. |
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A DIVING suit, a glider and a robot are among designs discovered in the notebooks of the great Renaissance visionary, Leonardo da Vinci. |
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For a summary and bibliography of these developments in Renaissance Hippocratism, see Siraisi, 1997, 119, and sources there cited. |
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Nearly all Renaissance epigrammatists looked back to Martial, the most prominent classical poet in the genre. |
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There has been something of a Biba Renaissance in recent years. |
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It brings a whole new shade of meaning to the Renaissance man. |
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It favors compositional tension and instability rather than the balance and clarity of earlier Renaissance painting. |
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On his showing, in Renaissance Florence there was not illegimacy, but illegitimacies. |
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By the time he ascended the throne in 1515, the Renaissance had arrived in France, and Francis became an enthusiastic patron of the arts. |
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She was a patron of Renaissance humanism, and a friend of the great scholars Erasmus of Rotterdam and Thomas More. |
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Inserted in the offprint is a signed typed letter from Frances Yates, the eminent scholar of Bruno and Renaissance mysticism. |
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About a hundred such halls were built in Britain between 1886 and 1945, many in a Renaissance or Baroque style. |
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This Quaker Renaissance movement was particularly influenced by John Wilhelm Rowntree, Edward Grubb, and Rufus Jones. |
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See links above for Italian Renaissance painting and Renaissance sculpture. |
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The Renaissance was a cultural movement that profoundly affected European intellectual life in the early modern period. |
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The culmination of the Renaissance came about in a bourgeois pluperfection during the seventeenth century. |
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With the English Renaissance literature in the Early Modern English style appeared. |
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Italians in the Renaissance often called anyone who lived outside of their country a barbarian. |
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The country they ruled experienced greater prosperity from the end of the 14th century through the Scottish Renaissance to the Reformation. |
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The Cretan Renaissance poem Erotokritos is undoubtedly the masterpiece of this period of Greek literature. |
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One of the distinguishing features of Renaissance art was its development of highly realistic linear perspective. |
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The Renaissance briefly reinforced the position of Latin as a spoken language by its adoption by the Renaissance Humanists. |
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There were good reasons for humanism and the Renaissance to take their origins from fourteenth-century Italy. |
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Interest in these events revived in the English Renaissance and led to Boudica's fame in the Victorian era. |
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In Europe the Italian Renaissance saw a conscious revival of correct classical styles, initially purely based on Roman examples. |
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I did a lot of reading about early Renaissance vendettas, and the interfamilial violence is horrifying. |
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Yet it remains much debated why the Renaissance began in Italy, and why it began when it did. |
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However, this does not fully explain why the Renaissance occurred specifically in Italy in the 14th century. |
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It has long been a matter of debate why the Renaissance began in Florence, and not elsewhere in Italy. |
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He successfully integrated an elaborate Northern style with Renaissance harmony and monumentality. |
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Notable German Renaissance architects include Friedrich Sustris, Benedikt Rejt, Abraham van den Blocke, Elias Holl and Hans Krumpper. |
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Hans the Elder was a pioneer and leader in the transformation of German art from the Gothic to the Renaissance style. |
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The Renaissance was largely driven by the renewed interest in classical learning, and was also the result of rapid economic development. |
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The region then produced significant works in styles such as the Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque. |
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Many critics since the 18th century have ranked Jonson below only Shakespeare among English Renaissance dramatists. |
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Italy was also affected by the Enlightenment, a movement which was a consequence of the Renaissance and changed the road of Italian philosophy. |
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Most of the city's public bridges were built in Classical or Renaissance style, but also in Baroque, Neoclassical and Modern styles. |
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Among others, a masterpiece of Renaissance architecture in Rome is the Piazza del Campidoglio by Michelangelo. |
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In 1527, the Landsknechts of Emperor Charles V sacked the city, putting to an abrupt end the golden age of the Renaissance in Rome. |
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During those years the centre of the Italian Renaissance moved to Rome from Florence. |
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Cologne was one of the leading members of the Hanseatic League and one of the largest cities north of the Alps in medieval and Renaissance times. |
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Also important were the many patrons who ruled states and used the artistry of the Renaissance as a sign of their power. |
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Beginning in the 14th century a Renaissance of knowledge challenged traditional doctrines in science and theology. |
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Its present use first appeared in Renaissance Germany in the works of Magnus Hundt and Otto Casmann. |
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Designs similar to the Chinese helicopter toy appeared in Renaissance paintings and other works. |
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As the centre of the movement shifted to Rome, the period culminated in the High Renaissance masters da Vinci, Michelangelo and Raphael. |
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Following a renewed interest in ancient Greek and Roman texts that took root in the High Middle Ages, the Italian Renaissance began. |
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Developing during the Enlightenment era, Renaissance humanism as an intellectual movement spread across Europe. |
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Traditionally, the European intellectual transformation of and after the Renaissance bridged the Middle Ages and the Modern era. |
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During the Renaissance era, the Venetians raised great walls around cities threatened by the Ottoman Empire. |
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Early in the 17th century late Gothic elements still prevailed, combined with Renaissance motives. |
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A website was launched by the Renaissance team, so that interested parties could monitor progress on all the projects. |
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In 2004, he founded the Mutton Renaissance Campaign, which aims to support British sheep farmers and make mutton more attractive to Britons. |
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The influence of the Renaissance can be seen in stone carving and painting from the fifteenth century. |
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Native craftsmen and artists turned to secular patrons, resulting in the flourishing of Scottish Renaissance painted ceilings and walls. |
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From the fifteenth century, Renaissance humanism encouraged critical theological reflection and calls for ecclesiastical renewal in Scotland. |
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The Renaissance Hotel du Parc provides 459 warmful rooms, including 15 luxurious suites. |
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The Renaissance began in Italy and spread to the rest of Europe, bringing a renewed interest in humanism, science, exploration and art. |
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The ideas and ideals of the Renaissance soon spread into Northern Europe, France, England and much of Europe. |
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In medieval and Renaissance times, the tusk of the narwhal was sometimes sold as unicorn horn. |
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Other prominent Renaissance sculptors include Lorenzo Ghiberti, Luca Della Robbia, Donatello, Filippo Brunelleschi and Andrea del Verrocchio. |
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In the 15th and 16th centuries, the High Renaissance gave rise to a stylised art known as Mannerism. |
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European influences include Italy, Germany and France, especially during the Renaissance Spanish Baroque and Neoclassical periods. |
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The oldest dances seem to be the passepied and the gavotte, and the newest ones derive from the quadrille and French Renaissance dances. |
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The Renaissance architecture is almost absent in the region, apart in Upper Brittany, close to the border with France. |
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One of the most famous is Pienza, close to Siena, a Renaissance city, also called The Ideal Town or Utopia Town. |
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James IV was a true Renaissance prince with an interest in practical and scientific matters. |
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When completed, this Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam is slated to be the largest hydroelectric power station on the continent. |
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The revival of classical models in the Renaissance produced famous sculptures such as Michelangelo's David. |
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High Renaissance artists created works of such authority that generations of later artists relied on these artworks for instruction. |
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High Renaissance artists include such figures as Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo Buonarroti, and Raffaello Sanzio. |
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Dutch painters such as Jan van Eyck and Hugo van der Goes were to have great influence on Late Gothic and Early Renaissance painting. |
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His famous cycle at the Scrovegni Chapel, Padua, is seen as the beginnings of a Renaissance style. |
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In the North, the most important Renaissance innovation was the widespread use of oil paints, which allowed for greater colour and intensity. |
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It was not until the literary efforts of Hugh MacDiarmid that the Scottish Renaissance can properly be said to have begun. |
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The Scottish Renaissance was a mainly literary movement of the early to mid 20th century that can be seen as the Scottish version of modernism. |
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The Renaissance and the New Monarchs marked the start of an Age of Discovery, a period of exploration, invention, and scientific development. |
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The Renaissance was a period of cultural change originating in Florence and later spreading to the rest of Europe. |
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The Harlem Renaissance of literary and cultural life flourished during the era of Prohibition. |
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Paxton also continued to build such houses as Mentmore Towers, in the still popular retrospective Renaissance styles. |
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Monarchs such as James IV were known for sponsoring exponents of the Northern Renaissance such as the poet Robert Henryson, and others. |
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The Italian Renaissance had come to an end under the weight of foreign domination of the peninsula. |
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It was the height of the English Renaissance and saw the flowering of English literature and poetry. |
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In Renaissance Latin, Vulgar Latin was called vulgare Latinum or Latinum vulgare. |
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The collection was in the tradition of a schatzkammer or treasure house such as those formed by the Renaissance princes of Europe. |
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The English Renaissance and the Renaissance in Scotland date from the late 15th century to the early 17th century. |
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Through the work of Johann Fux, the Renaissance style of polyphony was made the basis for the study of composition for future musical eras. |
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This era followed the Renaissance music era, and was followed in turn by the Classical era. |
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Byrd's output of about 470 compositions amply justifies his reputation as one of the great masters of European Renaissance music. |
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For instance, music of the English Renaissance is often performed in meantone temperament. |
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Vocal music in the Renaissance is noted for the flourishing of an increasingly elaborate polyphonic style. |
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The Italian Renaissance had rediscovered the ancient Greek and Roman theatre. |
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However, the canon of Renaissance poetry was formed only in the Victorian period, with anthologies like Palgrave's Golden Treasury. |
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As with other English Renaissance dramatists, a portion of Ben Jonson's literary output has not survived. |
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Hamlet reflects the contemporary scepticism promoted by the French Renaissance humanist Michel de Montaigne. |
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The rebirth of classical antiquity and Renaissance humanism also resulted in many Mythological and history paintings. |
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In many parts of Europe, Early Renaissance art was created in parallel with Late Medieval art. |
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Italian Renaissance painting and sculpture are marked by their renewal of classical forms, motifs and subjects. |
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As his career progressed, he added Italian Renaissance motifs to his Gothic vocabulary. |
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His Late Gothic style was enriched by artistic trends in Italy, France and the Netherlands, as well as by Renaissance humanism. |
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Tilman Riemenschneider, Veit Stoss and others continued the style well into the 16th century, gradually absorbing Italian Renaissance influences. |
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Painting with oil on canvas did not become popular until the 15th and 16th centuries and was a hallmark of Renaissance art. |
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In many areas, especially Germany, Late Gothic art continued well into the 16th century, before being subsumed into Renaissance art. |
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Similarly, philosophy is divided between Renaissance philosophy and the Enlightenment. |
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European music of the period is generally divided between Renaissance and Baroque. |
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The Carolingian Renaissance led to scientific and philosophical revival of Europe. |
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Pei chose the pyramid as the form that best harmonized with the Renaissance and neoclassical forms of the historic Louvre. |
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This type of Renaissance Revival architecture is called 'Tudor,' 'Mock Tudor,' 'Tudor Revival,' and 'Jacobethan. |
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This burnt to the ground at Christmas 1497, with the royal family in residence, and Henry began a new palace in a version of Renaissance style. |
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During the Renaissance palaces were built in Lebanon, especially in the Chouf region of Mount Lebanon. |
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From Tuscany the idea of villa was spread again through Renaissance Italy and Europe. |
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Unlike the individual arches erected for Roman conquerors, Renaissance rulers often built a row of arches through which processions were staged. |
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The new learning of the Renaissance greatly influenced Oxford from the late 15th century onwards. |
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This depiction, known as the 'Waldensian' witch became a cultural phenomenon of early Renaissance art. |
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The gardens, established during the Renaissance and Baroque era, are decorated with fountains and sculptures. |
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Another important influx of Latin words can be observed during Renaissance humanism. |
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Visual arts in the English Renaissance were much less significant than in the Italian Renaissance. |
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The dominant art forms of the English Renaissance were literature and music. |
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The English Renaissance is different from the Italian Renaissance in several ways. |
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The English Renaissance was a cultural and artistic movement in England dating from the late 15th to the early 17th century. |
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