Van Gogh • Artist Biographies • Giotto di Bondone
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Giotto di Bondone |
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| Birth Year : | 1267 | |
| Death Year : | 1337 | |
| Country : | Italy | |
Giotto di Bondone, the father of modern painting and one of the greatest figures in the history of
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Giotto signed his name to only three of his paintings. His most famous attributed works are the Arena
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Giotto was concerned with the problem of presenting human figures and their actions realistically on a flat surface that was to represent three-dimensional space. Before Giotto, artists had followed the flat forms of the Byzantine tradition, imitated each other, and disregarded what they saw around them. Giotto studied both nature and the human body which he saw as invested with great dignity, deep emotions, and humanity, and he placed his human figures in free, albeit shallow, space. It is to the credit of his contemporaries, artists and laymen alike, that his genius was recognized and accepted immediately. The old forms of art gradually vanished, first from Florence and then from other Italian art centers, to be replaced by new art forms from which there could be no turning back. Giotto's immediate successors were his pupils, Taddeo and Bernardo Daddi. It was not until seventy-five years later that Masaccio took the next step forward, experimenting with scientific perspective that permits infinite spatial representation on the flat plane. Giotto's form, content, and freedom of expression had a profound influence on the subsequent development of European painting.
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