• Essay
  • April 4, 2024
  • Open access

The edges of humanism of the Renaissance in the mid-13th – the mid-16th century: Part 1

Abstract

The essay is dedicated to exploring the art and culture of the Renaissance period, heralding Modern times, spanning from the mid-13th to the mid-16th century. This part of the work highlights the artistic achievements of the Middle East during the specified period, particularly in architecture, poetry (including the rise of humanism). Turning to European culture, the author specifically addresses the art of the Orthodox world (primarily focusing on church painting and, to a lesser extent, on the Ancient Russian Znamenny chant), noting its influence on the currents of the Renaissance. The author delves into the Gothic style, somewhat contrasting traditional notions of the Renaissance period (a kind of “counterculture”), across its various manifestations in visual arts, music and literature. Special attention is given to the central part of Renaissance art, tracing its evolution from the Early Renaissance (masterpieces of sculpture in Gothic cathedrals) to the Proto-Renaissance (paintings and frescoes by Italian masters, the emergence of psychologism in painting, the literary movement of Dolce stile nuovо marking the transition from the Middle Ages to Modern times, Ars Nova in musical art). The exploration of this theme will continue in the next part of the essay.

Author information

Aleksandr Ivanovich Demchenko

Dr

International Center of Complex Artistic Research; Saratov State Conservatory, Saratov

About this article

The translation of a part of the article is published at the author’s initiative. First published: Демченко А. И. Возрождение (середина XIII – середина XVI столетия). Грани гуманизма // ИКОНИ. 2020. № 4. С. 6-24. https://doi.org/10.33779/2658-4824.2020.4.006-024

Publication history

  • Received: February 15, 2024.
  • Published: April 4, 2024.

Keywords

  • Новое время
  • искусство Возрождения
  • гуманизм
  • готика
  • Проторенессанс
  • Modern times
  • Renaissance art
  • humanism
  • Gothic
  • Proto-Renaissance

Copyright

© 2024 The Author(s)
© 2024 Gramota Publishing, LLC

User license

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)