Going For Baroque
1600-1750
1600 was the death of bach
flamboyant, theatrical, and expressive tendencies of seventeenth century art and architecture
“long” seventeenth century expands the normal chronological boundaries of a single century-long time period
diversity of styles
1600 - scientific revolution
kepler - planets move around the sun
galileo - used telescope to discover sunspots jupiter's moons
descartes - logical, deductive philosophy
newton - law of gravitation
new thinking about politics
advocated democracy in england, supported absolute monarchy in france
religious conflict between german protestants and catholics preceded the thirty years' war, which devastated germany
english civil war also had religious aspects
europeans were expanding overseas
british, french and dutch established colonies in north america, the caribbean, africa, asia in competition with spain and portugal
sugar and tobacco imports - slave trade
capitalism
britain, netherlands, northern italy prospered
joint stock company pooled the wealth of many individuals while limiting their risk - formed to finance opera houses in bigger cities
rise of opera and public concerts and increased demand from upper classes for music
increasingly exaggerated displays of wealth and increasingly dire circumstances for lower classes and oppressed people
music
instrumental music flourished
musicians depended on patrons and the types of music that won support varied from region to region
italy was the best place for musicians because of a combination of trade and princely courts
rulers continued to support the arts for prestige
patronage
louis xiv
power and wealth were concentrated in the monarchy
louis xiv controlled the arts and used them to assert his glory
longest ruler - 72 years
france replaced spain as the prominent power on the continent - french music was widely imitated
many cities had academies, private associations that, among other functions, sponsored musical activities
public opera houses were established in many cities, beginning in venice in 1637
tickets and subscriptions
golden age of drama - shakespeare to racine
collaboration of theatre, painting and music led to the creation of opera
painting, sculpture, literature of the time had theatrical qualities and were intended to make people feel
baroque era of music, art and architecture began in italy
bernini - outstanding sculptor of the century, designed st peter's basilica as well as other structures across rome, sculptures make the viewer respond emotionally rather than with detached emotion
emotion was key to the baroque aesthetic and movement created that - motion depicted in sculptures, active bass lines
art
extreme lighting contrasts
realism
emotion
motion
violence
theory of the affections
emotions were thought of as relatively stable states of the soul, each caused by a certain combination of humors in the body
once the humors were set in motion by external stimuli via the senses they conveyed their motions to the soul and brought about specific emotions
all arts of this period sought to move the affections
composers of opera displayed a musical gallery of emotions by writing a series of arias for every act, each aria seeking to render a psychological portrait of a character aroused by a certain emotion
galileo demonstrated that the senses and the affections were both instruments of learning, so the eyes and ears could be conduits of human behaviour and a new respect for the senses developed
moving affections in art
paintings and operas frequently concentrated on subjects involving physical action and psychological reaction
rhythm was used in music to stimulate emotion
painting didn't always aspire to be beautiful - rembrandt made physical imperfection acceptable in art
music became one of the sister arts when it allied itself inseparably with words during the renaissance and so participated in various aesthetic debates during the 17th century (ex. conservatives vs innovators, design vs colour)
text expression - monteverdi believed that the text dictating its musical setting would make it more emotional (second practice)
monteverdi created new classifications - first and second practices, language for different musical functions (church, chamber, theater, dance), styles implying categories of affections (relaxed, moderate, excited)
instrumental music classifications - arrangements of movements into sonatas, grouping of sonatas into collections, pairs of contrasting pieces (ex. toccata and fugue)
forces in theory that held music together and pushed them apart
tension between order and disorder, control and freedom
complex, asymmetrical structures
court masques and antimasques written
1600-1750
1600 was the death of bach
flamboyant, theatrical, and expressive tendencies of seventeenth century art and architecture
“long” seventeenth century expands the normal chronological boundaries of a single century-long time period
diversity of styles
1600 - scientific revolution
kepler - planets move around the sun
galileo - used telescope to discover sunspots jupiter's moons
descartes - logical, deductive philosophy
newton - law of gravitation
new thinking about politics
advocated democracy in england, supported absolute monarchy in france
religious conflict between german protestants and catholics preceded the thirty years' war, which devastated germany
english civil war also had religious aspects
europeans were expanding overseas
british, french and dutch established colonies in north america, the caribbean, africa, asia in competition with spain and portugal
sugar and tobacco imports - slave trade
capitalism
britain, netherlands, northern italy prospered
joint stock company pooled the wealth of many individuals while limiting their risk - formed to finance opera houses in bigger cities
rise of opera and public concerts and increased demand from upper classes for music
increasingly exaggerated displays of wealth and increasingly dire circumstances for lower classes and oppressed people
music
instrumental music flourished
musicians depended on patrons and the types of music that won support varied from region to region
italy was the best place for musicians because of a combination of trade and princely courts
rulers continued to support the arts for prestige
patronage
louis xiv
power and wealth were concentrated in the monarchy
louis xiv controlled the arts and used them to assert his glory
longest ruler - 72 years
france replaced spain as the prominent power on the continent - french music was widely imitated
many cities had academies, private associations that, among other functions, sponsored musical activities
public opera houses were established in many cities, beginning in venice in 1637
tickets and subscriptions
golden age of drama - shakespeare to racine
collaboration of theatre, painting and music led to the creation of opera
painting, sculpture, literature of the time had theatrical qualities and were intended to make people feel
baroque era of music, art and architecture began in italy
bernini - outstanding sculptor of the century, designed st peter's basilica as well as other structures across rome, sculptures make the viewer respond emotionally rather than with detached emotion
emotion was key to the baroque aesthetic and movement created that - motion depicted in sculptures, active bass lines
art
extreme lighting contrasts
realism
emotion
motion
violence
theory of the affections
emotions were thought of as relatively stable states of the soul, each caused by a certain combination of humors in the body
once the humors were set in motion by external stimuli via the senses they conveyed their motions to the soul and brought about specific emotions
all arts of this period sought to move the affections
composers of opera displayed a musical gallery of emotions by writing a series of arias for every act, each aria seeking to render a psychological portrait of a character aroused by a certain emotion
galileo demonstrated that the senses and the affections were both instruments of learning, so the eyes and ears could be conduits of human behaviour and a new respect for the senses developed
moving affections in art
paintings and operas frequently concentrated on subjects involving physical action and psychological reaction
rhythm was used in music to stimulate emotion
painting didn't always aspire to be beautiful - rembrandt made physical imperfection acceptable in art
music became one of the sister arts when it allied itself inseparably with words during the renaissance and so participated in various aesthetic debates during the 17th century (ex. conservatives vs innovators, design vs colour)
text expression - monteverdi believed that the text dictating its musical setting would make it more emotional (second practice)
monteverdi created new classifications - first and second practices, language for different musical functions (church, chamber, theater, dance), styles implying categories of affections (relaxed, moderate, excited)
instrumental music classifications - arrangements of movements into sonatas, grouping of sonatas into collections, pairs of contrasting pieces (ex. toccata and fugue)
forces in theory that held music together and pushed them apart
tension between order and disorder, control and freedom
complex, asymmetrical structures
court masques and antimasques written