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  2. Mannerism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mannerism

    Mannerism is a style in European art that emerged in the later years of the Italian High Renaissance around 1520, spreading by about 1530 and lasting until about the end of the 16th century in Italy, when the Baroque style largely replaced it. Northern Mannerism continued into the early 17th century.

  3. Northern Mannerism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_Mannerism

    Northern Mannerism is the form of Mannerism found in the visual arts north of the Alps in the 16th and early 17th centuries. [ 1 ] Styles largely derived from Italian Mannerism were found in the Netherlands and elsewhere from around the mid-century, especially Mannerist ornament in architecture; this article concentrates on those times and ...

  4. Art in the Protestant Reformation and Counter-Reformation

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_in_the_Protestant...

    Protestant religious art both embraced Protestant values and assisted in the proliferation of Protestantism, but the amount of religious art produced in Protestant countries was hugely reduced. Artists in Protestant countries diversified into secular forms of art like history painting, landscape painting, portrait painting and still life.

  5. Pontormo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pontormo

    An example of Pontormo's early style is a fresco depicting the Visitation of the Virgin and St Elizabeth, with its dancelike, balanced figures, painted from 1514 to 1516. This early Visitation makes an interesting comparison with his painting of the same subject which was done about a decade later, now housed in the parish church of St. Michael ...

  6. List of Mannerist painters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Mannerist_painters

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  7. Figura serpentinata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figura_serpentinata

    Figura serpentinata (lit. ' serpentine figure') is a style in painting and sculpture, intended to make the figure seem more dynamic, that is typical of Mannerism. It is similar, but not identical, to contrapposto, and features figures often in a spiral pose. [1] Early examples can be seen in the work of Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael and Michelangelo.

  8. Art in early modern Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_in_early_modern_Scotland

    Self portrait of George Jamesone, 1642 Rare example of pre-Reformation stained glass in the Magdalen Chapel, Edinburgh. Art in early modern Scotland includes all forms of artistic production within the modern borders of Scotland, between the adoption of the Renaissance in the early sixteenth century to the beginnings of the Enlightenment in the mid-eighteenth century.

  9. Antwerp Mannerism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antwerp_Mannerism

    Antwerp Mannerism is the name given to the style of a group of largely anonymous painters active in the Southern Netherlands and principally in Antwerp in roughly the first three decades of the 16th century, a movement marking the tail end of Early Netherlandish painting, and an early phase within Dutch and Flemish Renaissance painting.