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Usborne Renaissance - Chapter 5 - Art and Storytelling

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Usborne Renaissance - Chapter 5 - Art and Storytelling

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Bosnia y Herzegovina

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Usborne Renaissance - Chapter 5 - Art and StorytellingVersión en línea

Usborne Renaissance - Chapter 5 - Art and Storytelling

por Vijo Gor
1

What types of stories did Renaissance artists use as inspiration for their art?

2

How did Renaissance artists make their mythical and biblical paintings relatable?

3

Why did artists sometimes include real people in their paintings of saints or heroes?

4

What is Michelangelo’s David?

5

Why were public sculptures and statues created during the Renaissance?

Feedback

Renaissance art often told stories from ancient Greek and Roman myths, biblical stories, and the lives of saints, making these themes central to their works.

Artists often placed mythological or biblical characters in settings and clothing from their own time, making the stories feel more connected to their audiences.

Artists often included their patrons (the people who paid for the art) in their paintings as a way to show respect and gratitude.

Michelangelo’s David is a giant marble statue of the biblical hero David, created to stand in a public space in Florence.

Public sculptures and statues were made for churches, palaces, and town squares to tell stories that could inspire or educate everyone.

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