BAROQUE, in Art and Architecture

bərōkˈ, in art and architecture, a style developed in Europe, England, and the Americas during the 17th and early 18th cent.

The baroque style is characterized by an emphasis on unity among the arts. With technical brilliance, the baroque artist achieved a remarkable harmony wherein painting, sculpture, and architecture were brought together in new spatial relationships, both real and illusionary, often with spectacular visual effects. Although the restrained and classical works created by most French and English artists look very different from the exuberant works favored in central and southern Europe and in the New World, both trends in baroque art tend to engage the viewer, both physically and emotionally. In painting and sculpture this was achieved by means of highly developed naturalistic illusionism, usually heightened by dramatic lighting effects, creating an unequaled sense of theatricality, energy, and movement of forms. Architecture, departing from the classical canon revived during the Renaissance, took on the fluid, plastic aspects of sculpture.

Baroque Painting

Painters and sculptors built and expanded on the naturalistic tradition reestablished during the Renaissance. Although religious painting, history painting, allegories, and portraits were still considered the most noble subjects, landscapes, still lifes, and genre scenes were painted by such artists as Claude Lorrain, Jacob van Ruisdael, Willem Kalf, and Jan Vermeer. Caravaggio and his early followers were especially significant for their naturalistic treatment of unidealized, ordinary people. The illusionistic effects of deep space interested many painters, including Il Guercino and Andrea Pozzo. Other baroque painters opened up interior spaces by representing long files of rooms, often with extended views through doors, windows, or mirrors, as in the works of Diego Velázquez and Vermeer.

Color was manipulated for its emotional effects, ranging from the clear calm tones of Nicholas Poussin, to the warm and shimmering colors of Pietro da Cortona, to the more vivid hues of Peter Paul Rubens. A heightened sense of drama was achieved through chiaroscuro in the works of Caravaggio and Rembrandt. Carracci and Poussin portrayed restrained feeling in accordance with the academic principles of dignity and decorum. Others, including Caravaggio, Rubens, and Rembrandt depicted religious ecstasy, physical sensuality, or individual psychology in their paintings.

Baroque Sculpture

Baroque sculptors felt free to combine different materials within a single work and often used one material to simulate another. One of the great masterpieces of baroque sculpture, Giovanni Bernini's St. Theresa from the Cornaro Chapel, for example, succumbs to an ecstatic vision on a dull-finished marble cloud in an alabaster and marble niche in which bronze rays descend from a hidden source of light. Many works of Baroque sculpture are set within elaborate architectural settings, and they often seem to be spilling out of their assigned niches or floating upward toward heaven.

Baroque Architecture

Buildings of the period are composed of great curving forms with undulating facades, ground plans of unprecedented size and complexity, and domes of various shapes, as in the churches of Francesco Borromini, Guarino Guarini, and Balthasar Neumann. Many works of baroque architecture were executed on a colossal scale, incorporating aspects of urban planning and landscape architecture. This is most clearly seen in Bernini's elliptical piazza in front of St. Peter's in Rome, or in the gardens, fountains, and palace at Versailles, designed by Louis Le Vau, Jules Hardouin-Mansart, and André Le Nôtre.

Divisions of the Baroque Period

For convenience the baroque period is divided into three parts:

Early Baroque, c.1590–c.1625

The early style was preeminent under papal patronage in Rome where Carracci and Caravaggio and his followers diverged decisively from the artifice of the preceding mannerist painters (see mannerism). Bernini abandoned an early mannerism in his sculpture, allowing him to express a new naturalistic vigor. In architecture, Carlo Maderno's facades for Sta. Susanna and St. Peter's moved toward a more sculptural treatment of the classical orders.

High Baroque, c.1625–c.1660

The exuberant trend in Italian art was best represented by Bernini and Borromini in architecture, by Bernini in sculpture, and by da Cortona in painting. The classicizing mode characterized the work of the expatriate painters Poussin and Claude Lorrain. This period produced an astonishing number and variety of international painters of the first rank, including Rembrandt, Rubens, Velázquez, and Anthony van Dyck.

Late Baroque, c.1660–c.1725

During this time Italy lost its position of artistic dominance to France, largely due to the patronage of Louis XIV. The late baroque style was especially popular in Germany and Austria, where many frescoes by the Tiepolo family were executed. The extraordinarily theatrical quality of the architecture in these countries is best seen in the work of Neumann and Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach. From Europe the baroque spread across the Atlantic Ocean to the New World. Gradually the massive forms of the baroque yielded to the lighter, more graceful outlines of the rococo.

Bibliography

See R. Wittkower, Art and Architecture in Italy, 1600–1750 (1958); A. Blunt, Art and Architecture in France, 1500–1700 (1953); J. W. P. Bourke, Baroque Churches of Central Europe (1962); E. Hempel, Baroque Art and Architecture in Central Europe (1965); H. Busch and B. Lohse, ed., Baroque Sculpture (tr. 1965); M. Kitson, The Age of the Baroque (1966); G. Bazin, The Baroque (1968).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

-4324-

Search the Library
Books
Journals
Magazines
Newspapers
Encyclopedia
Advanced Search
About Questia
Questia is the world's largest online academic library offering full-text books, journals, and articles on thousands of topics.

Join Now...
Questia Books and Articles on: Baroque in Art and Architecture
We found: 2124 results
By media type:
 

Books:

 

996  

 

Journal articles:

 

390  

 

Magazine articles:

 

438  

 

Newspaper articles:

 

268  

 

Encyclopedia articles:

 

32  

Research Topics on: Baroque in Art and Architecture

List All Topics    
Baroque Art
 

books on: Baroque in Art and Architecture  - 996 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...art, R. Wittkowers Art and Architecture in Italy 1600-1750...by J. R. Martin, Baroque New York: 1977 , 33...3 M. Lyttleton, Baroque Architecture in Classical...Misuses of the Terms Baroque and Rococo as Applied...rhetorical theory and the arts, see H. J. Jensen...
...and ter E. H. Kuile Art and Architecture in Belgium 1600-1800...Reginald G. A Dictionary of Art Terms: Architecture...Painting, and the Graphic Arts . England: Poole, New...Hartt, Frederick. Art, A History of Painting...Hempel, Eberhard. Baroque Art and Architecture...
...Trajan, Beneventum, 25 Architecture and economics, 14 , 16 Architecture, role of art in, 37 -41, 43 Architectural...Arneberg, Arnstein, 99 Art and architecture, teaching of, 28 , 29 , 43 , 45 Art and society, 9 , 11...Synthesis of the Plastic Arts," 76 Assy, France...156 , 157 , 166 , 168 Baroque architecture, 3 Baroque...
...Stanley-Baker, Joan, Japanese Art, London, Thames and Hudson...Lucien, The Age of Grandeur: Baroque Art and Architecture, trans. A. R. Williamson...1961 Thomas, Nicholas, Oceanic Art, London, Thames and Hudson...
Colonial Art and Architecture The treachery and cynicism...development of Portuguese baroque in Brazil. In all three...and the establishment of baroque architecture. The period...of the 17th century, baroque remained moderate and...
More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

journal articles on: Baroque in Art and Architecture  - 390 results

       More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...Blunt, A. 1968. Sicilian Baroque. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson...Citta 1610-1760 (Sicilian Baroque: Architecture and City) Rome: Officina...Giuffre, M. 2007. The Baroque Architecture of Sicily. London: Thames...
Nuyorican Baroque: Pepon Osorios Chucherias...distinctions of taste and high art, Osoric uses kitsch...seventeenth-century baroque style of architecture. And in the twentieth...the Hostos Center for Art and Culture, it was...Ronald Feldman Fine Arts. Confronting racism...
...15 For Hegel, architecture was not so much eccentric to art history as superseded...transcends the visual arts altogether. In his...is the basis for architectures glory as the first...from its base in art history departments in liberal arts colleges and universities...especially those without architecture schools, is to explore architectures historical relationships...specialty. What art historians currently...
...Veronese.23 Other Baroque art critics, such as...that only through art is it possible to...that Renaissance and Baroque authors genenited...The "work" of art was not the physical...painting by the French Baroque painter.137 Krausss...
...commissioned works of art, but they stood in the...characteristic features of Baroque church decoration. The...understandably make no mention of art, in one significant...reform of ecclesiastical architecture, the 1577 Instructiones...because in such programs art acted primarily as a...
More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

magazine articles on: Baroque in Art and Architecture  - 438 results

       More magazine Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
Performance Art: As a New Exhibition on the Baroque Opens at the Victoria...by Joanna Norman The Baroque style was a global phenomenon...an impact on all the arts. In disciplines ranging...painting, sculpture and architecture to theatre and music the Baroque reigned as the dominant...
...ART ON THE VERGE OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN" by DANIEL...has been a part of art since Surrealism, but...Moderna Museets "What If: Art on the Verge of Architecture...temperature of contemporary art" by looking at its relationship...Looking back further, the Baroque period achieved, in...Deleuze, "a unity of the arts"; it was an era when...
Modern Baroque: A Provincial German Art Museum Gets the Frank Gehry Treatment...attention. MARTa, the museum of modern art and design in Herford, evokes the swirling, theatrical forms of southern Baroque more than it does the sober vernacular...
...Significance in British Architecture Today. by Rob Gregory...knows that Modern architecture is undecorated. At...conspicuously absent from architectures lexicon. British...did recent British architecture get close to a meaningful...reaction against the Baroque). Rather it was...related to the lost art of figurative representation...
...Stockholm Is Rich in Art Nouveau Architecture. by Corb Kummer WHEN...favorite styles--Art Nouveau and Arts and Crafts, which co...with their imposing baroque palaces. They are indeed...Swedish versions of both Art Nouveau and Arts and...
More magazine Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

newspaper articles on: Baroque in Art and Architecture  - 268 results

       More newspaper Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
ART OF THE IMPROBABLE...to Roman Catholic Architecture Defined Her Work...ornate 16th century baroque altar of the Church...the exoticism of the baroque, which we did not...Portuguese paintings, In a Baroque Church, Lisbon...
...COLLECTION; Spectacular Architecture. Pioneering Art. the Most Delicious...backdrop of imposing architecture, dappled waterways...fleshly kind of beauty - art. The capital of the...stroll, take in the Baroque Trevi Fountain or wander...
...shows on styles from Art Nouveau to Modernism, the V A will present Baroque 1620-1800: Style In...all manifestations of Baroque opulence, from candlesticks...museums director, said: "Baroque is one of the most exuberant...of Baroque including architecture, art and design...
...assumption that every work of art or artefact produced...than the period we call Baroque -- that is, principally...mysticism brought the Baroque about are virtually...museums loose usage of Baroque in terms of both period...European engravings of architecture and sculpture. Among...covered the three primary arts, painting, sculpture...
...National Gallery of Art is going for baroque in a big way over...for "Triumph of the Baroque: Architecture in Europe 1600-1750...spectacular scale models of baroque-era churches, palaces...Endowment for the Arts Chairman William Ivey...
More newspaper Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

encyclopedia articles on: Baroque in Art and Architecture  - 32 results

       More encyclopedia Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-32 >>  
 
BAROQUE , in art and architecture b rok , in art and architecture, a style...and early 18th cent. The baroque style is characterized...emphasis on unity among the arts. With technical brilliance, the baroque artist achieved a remarkable...
MEXICAN ART AND ARCHITECTURE works of art and structures produced...country of Mexico. Such arts were already highly developed...see pre-Columbian art and architecture . The Colonial Period Folk arts, including the weaving...referred to as Mexican baroque to distinguish it from...
...genius in all the arts. Polychrome religious...in the history of art. His paintings...decorative effects. In architecture an extreme reaction...Churrigueresque architecture include the Transparente...exuberance of late baroque art. The founding...Spanish academies of art resulted in a wave...creativity in the arts for nearly two centuries...
ENGLISH ART AND ARCHITECTURE the distinctive national art and architecture that art may be said to have evolved...style ; and the minor arts, e.g., Doulton ware...flourishing religious art of painting, sculpture...created an English baroque through his original...
SCANDINAVIAN ART AND ARCHITECTURE works of art and structures...Viking period. Viking art (c.800 c.1050...of early Scandinavian art are in the collections...The Renaissance and Baroque Period Foreign stylistic...through the Renaissance and baroque periods, the North German...furniture and applied arts, particularly glassmaking...
More encyclopedia Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-32 >>

 About Questia   ::   Privacy   ::   Contact