Who was Leonardo da Vinci?
"Italian painter, draftsman, sculptor, architect, and engineer" (Heydenreich).
Who was Raffaello Sanzio?
"Italian painter and architect of the High Renaissance" (Abeza).
Who was Michelangelo?
"Italian Renaissance" "painter, sculptor, architect, and poet" ("The Life and Works of the Great Michlangelo")
Who was Tiziano Vecellio?
"Italian Renaissance painter of the Venetian School" (Wethey).
Who was Giorgio Vasari?
"Italian painter, architect, and writer" ("Giorgio Vasari")
Most famous painting from the 1500's
Mona Lisa (Lorusso, et al.)
What was he "commissioned to paint" ("Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio)(the J. Paul Getty Museum Collection)")?
"Potraits, devotional subjects," as well as "the Pope's private rooms" ("Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio)(the J. Paul Getty Museum Collection)")
What "sculpture" did Michelangelo offer "to the Cathedral of Florence" (Cartwright)?
David
Most famous painting
Venus of Urbino ("Titian Paintings, Bio, Ideas")
What did he create known as "the Bible of Italian Renaissance" (Bastek)?
"The Lives of the Artists" (Bastek)
An "obsession" found within his art (Cunningham, et al.)
"Symmetry" (Cunningham, et al.)
What was his "first architectural work" ("Raphael")?
The church of Sant'Eligio degli Orefici ("Raphael").
What did Michelangelo create within his works?
A "High-Renaissance blend of aesthetic harmony and anatomical accuracy" ("Michelangelo, His Sculptures and Life).
What was he "known" "for" the "use of" within his art (Department of European Paintings)?
"Color" (Department of European Paintings)
What influenced his artwork?
The study of works created by other "Italian artists" ("Giorgio Vasari The First Art Historian").
Why did he write "backwards" (Cunningham, et al.)?
He "was left-handed" (Cunningham, et al.).
What was he "crowned" as "by Giorgio Vasari" ( ("Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio)(the J. Paul Getty Museum Collection)")?
The "Prince of Painters" ("Raphael (Raffaello Sanzio)(the J. Paul Getty Museum Collection)").
How many popes did he create artwork for?
"Nine" (Andrews)
What was he "commissioned to paint" (The National Gallery)?
"Prestigious public religious paintings" (The National Gallery)
What boosted his "connections" "among" Europe (Forbes)?
Direct employment "by" "the Medici Family" (Forbes)
What did he believe about science and art?
"Art is the queen of all sciences communicating knowledge to all the generations of the world" (Shah).
What did Sanzio create "a sense of" within his art (Cartwright)?
"Space, geometrical harmony, and physical drama"
(Cartwright)
What did he believe about art and perfection?
"The true work of art is but a shadow of the divine perfection" ("Michelangelo, His Sculptures and Life").
What "ideas" did he combine in his artwork ("Titian Paintings, Bio, Ideas")?
"High Renaissance and Mannerist" ("Titian Paintings, Bio, Ideas")
How did his artwork differ from many "High Renaissance artists" (Forbes)?
He used mannerism to react "against" "harmony and clarity" styles (Forbes).