The
Italian Renaissance represents the culmination of artistic achievement
brought about by a revival of the arts and sciences of ancient Roman
and Greek cultures. This profoundly influential source for learning
changed the way people thought about the arts, religion, politics,
nature, and especially themselves. The development of a wealthy middle
class through expanding trade and banking led to the commissioning
of art for homes in addition to art commissioned by the church. A
renewed study in the humanities
led to important investigations and
discoveries in diverse realms such as geography, physics, anatomy,
biology, mechanical invention, optics, and mathematics. Such advancements
inspired artists to paint with an increasingly realistic view of
both nature and mankind. Furthermore,
the humanistic belief of man as the measure of all things influenced
society and developed a radically new disposition in the cultural
and social climate of 15th century Italy. Artists began to paint
the human figure in
numerous inventive and expressive forms.
The paintings on this site provide a quality sampling of Renaissance art, and a glimpse into the extensive Renaissance collection at the Museum & Gallery.
