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Italian Language and Culture

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Italian Language and Culture. Past and Present. Architecture. Roman architectural idioms of arches, columns and domes - foundations of later Italian architecture The Romanesque style (9th to 11th century) The Renaissance style (the late 14th to the 16th c) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Italian Language and Culture Past and Present
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Page 1: Italian Language and Culture

Italian Language and Culture

Past and Present

Page 2: Italian Language and Culture

Architecture• Roman architectural idioms of

arches, columns and domes - foundations of later Italian architecture

• The Romanesque style (9th to 11th century)

• The Renaissance style (the late 14th to the 16th c)

• The baroque style and Palladianism (16th - 17th c)

• Neoclassical style (18th -19th c)

Page 3: Italian Language and Culture

Architecture• Romanesque because plenty

of Roman architectural elements were used - Roman arches, stained glass and carved columns.

• Bitono, Bari, Puglia

Page 4: Italian Language and Culture

Architecture• Roman Arches • Stained glass

Page 5: Italian Language and Culture

Architecture• The Renaissance • The revival of the ‘golden age’ -

ancient Rome• Fillipo Brunelleschi built the

largest dome for the Florence cathedral since Roman times.

Page 6: Italian Language and Culture

Architecture

• Basillica di Sant’Andrea at Mantua designed by Leon Battista Alberti

Page 7: Italian Language and Culture

Architecture

• Basilica di San Pietro at Rome designed by Michelangelo and Bramante

Page 8: Italian Language and Culture

Architecture

• Paradianism Buildings by Andrea Palladio• La Rotonda in Vicenza (1570)

Page 9: Italian Language and Culture

• Square building which looks the same from every side. At the centre there is a dome. On every side there is a portico like a Roman temple.

Page 10: Italian Language and Culture

Architecture

• 16 July, Erez Golani Solomon• The Ideal Villa: Legacy of Andrea Palladio

Page 11: Italian Language and Culture

Literature• Italian literature;

literature written in the Italian language since the 14 th century.

• Written in Latin before• Dante Alighieri (1265-

1321)• The Divine Comedy

(1304-7)

Page 12: Italian Language and Culture

Literature

• Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vitami ritrovai per una selva oscura,ché la diritta via era smarrita

• In the middle of the journey of our lifeI found myself in a dark wood,for the straight way was lost.

Page 13: Italian Language and Culture

Literature• Francesco Petrarch• Completed ‘sonnet’

form – 14 lines with distinctive rhyming patterns

• Love sonnets • Influenced on all

European poets

Page 14: Italian Language and Culture

Literature

• Giovanni Boccacio• Decameron (1348-53)

a prose collection of 100 stories told by 10 narrators

Page 15: Italian Language and Culture

Drama

• Comedia del arte – a form of theatre characterized by masked ‘types’ begun in the 16 th century

• Emergence of actress, improvised performance based on sketches or scnearios.

Page 16: Italian Language and Culture

Drama

• 18 June Takeo Fujikura• Italian Mime and Clown: Comedia del Arte

Page 17: Italian Language and Culture

Literauture • Gabrielle D’Annunzio • Man of action,

nationalist, literary virtuoso, aesthete, and exhibitionist

• Life and art was a blend of Jacob Burckhardt’s ‘complete man’ and Nietzsche’s ‘superman’

Page 18: Italian Language and Culture

Literature

• Yukio Mishima enormously influenced by D’Annunzio not only in literature but also in life

• Nationalist, aesthete, exhibitionist, and literary virtuoso.

Page 19: Italian Language and Culture

Literature • Literary connection

between Italy and Japan• Love of translated literature

in Italy • Over the half of the fictions

published are translations• 16 April Alessandro

Gerevini, The Reception of Japanese Fictions in Italy

Page 20: Italian Language and Culture

Literature

• Italo Calvino (1923 Cuba – 1985 Siena) Journalist, short-story writer and novelist

• Imaginative and whimsical fables made him one of the most important 20 th century writer.

• 4 June, Italian Fairy Tales and Italo Calvino

Page 21: Italian Language and Culture

Art

• Giotto – the first artist who painted people, nature and action realistically.

• In the frescos in churches of Assisi, Florence, Padua and Rome, he created life like figures showing real emotions

Page 22: Italian Language and Culture

Giotto

Page 23: Italian Language and Culture

Giotto

Page 24: Italian Language and Culture

Giotto

Page 25: Italian Language and Culture

Art• The Renaissance (from the

late 1400s to the early 1500s) dominated by Michelangelo, Raphael and Leonardo.

• Michelangelo; sculptor, painter, and poet

• The greatest sculptor in history

• Master of portraying the human figure

Page 26: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo

Page 27: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo

Page 28: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo

Page 29: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo

Page 30: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo

Page 31: Italian Language and Culture

Raphael

• Raphael’s paintings are softer, gentler, more poetic, and harmonious.

• Impeccable composition and perfect perspective

• Delicate ‘Madonna’ paintings with young Jesus and his cousin John the Baptist

Page 32: Italian Language and Culture

Raphael

Page 33: Italian Language and Culture

Raphael

Page 34: Italian Language and Culture

Raphael

Page 35: Italian Language and Culture

Raphael

Page 36: Italian Language and Culture

Raphael

Page 37: Italian Language and Culture

Leonardo

• Leonardo, painter and natural scientist

• He embodied the Renaissance spirit of learning and intellectual curiosity

Page 38: Italian Language and Culture

Leonardo

Page 39: Italian Language and Culture

Leonardo

Page 40: Italian Language and Culture

Leonardo

Page 41: Italian Language and Culture

Art• Michelangelo di Meresi

da Caravaggio• Baroque paintings

combine the realistic observation of human state, both physical and emotional, with dramatic use of lighting

Page 42: Italian Language and Culture

Caravaggio

• 14 May, Norimasa Morita, Michelangelo Meresi da Caravaggio: a Revolutionary Artist

Page 43: Italian Language and Culture

Art• Italian modernist art in

the early 20th century• Giorgio di Chirico• Futurism• Metaphysical Art• 7 May, Helena Chapkova,

Italian Modernist Art

Page 44: Italian Language and Culture

Music• Italian music – one of

Europe’s supreme expressions of the art

• Gregorian chants – the innovation of modern musical notation in the 11th century

• Dies irae – the Second Coming of Christ and Judgement

Page 45: Italian Language and Culture

Music

• Troubadour and the madrigal

• Palestrina’s polyphonic church music and Monteverdi’s religious and secular music and operas

• Great Italian music tradition

Page 46: Italian Language and Culture

Music

• Italian Baroque music• Creation of rich tonality,

elaborate musical ornamentation, new instrumental playing techniques

• Vivaldi, Scarlatti, Corelli, Marcello

• Oboe concerto

Page 47: Italian Language and Culture

Music

• Italy – birth place of opera

• Opera was born around 1600 combination of singing, acting, orchestral music, acting and dance

• Recitativo (dialogue) and aria (song)

Page 48: Italian Language and Culture

Music• Opera of the Golden

Age• Opera of Romantic

Period in the 19th c• Gioacchino Rossini,

Vincenzo Bellini, Gaetano Donizetti & Giacomo Puccini

• La Boheme; Duet

Page 49: Italian Language and Culture

Music• Giuseppe Verdi (1813-

1901)• 23 April, Seishiro Niwa

Social Background of the Birth of Opera

• Aida, Triumphant March


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