61
Italian Language and Culture Past and Present

Italian Language and Culture

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

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

Citation preview

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

Idioms of the Classic Architecture

Page 5: Italian Language and Culture

Architecture

• The Arch of Constantine with Roman arches and columns

Page 6: Italian Language and Culture
Page 7: 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 8: Italian Language and Culture

Architecture

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

Page 9: Italian Language and Culture

Architecture

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

Page 10: Italian Language and Culture

Architecture

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

Page 11: 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 12: Italian Language and Culture

Architecture

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

Page 13: 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 14: 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 15: Italian Language and Culture

Literature• Francesco Petrarch• Completed ‘sonnet’

form – 14 lines with distinctive rhyming patterns

• Love sonnets • Influenced on all

European poets

Page 16: Italian Language and Culture

Literature Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? Thou art more lovely and more temperate:Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,And summer's lease hath all too short a date: Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,And often is his gold complexion dimm'd; And every fair from fair sometime declines,By chance, or nature's changing course, untrimm'd;But thy eternal summer shall not fadeNor lose possession of that fair thou ow'st;Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade,When in eternal lines to time thou grow'st; So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.

Page 17: Italian Language and Culture

Literature 秋の夜は、はるかの彼方に、小石ばかりの、河原があつて、それに陽は、さらさらとさらさらと射してゐるのでありました。

陽といつても、まるで硅石か何かのやうで、非常な個体の粉末のやうで、さればこそ、さらさらとかすかな音を立ててもゐるのでした。

さて小石の上に、今しも一つの蝶がとまり、淡い、それでゐてくつきりとした影を落としてゐるのでした。

やがてその蝶がみえなくなると、いつのまにか、今迄流れてもゐなかつた川床に、水はさらさらと、さらさらと流れてゐるのでありました……   Chuya Nakahara

Page 18: Italian Language and Culture

Literature

• Giovanni Boccacio• Decameron (1348-53)

a prose collection of 100 stories told by 10 narrators

Page 19: 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 20: Italian Language and Culture

Drama

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

Page 21: 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 22: 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 23: 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 24: 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.

• 3 June, Italian Fairy Tales and Italo Calvino

Page 25: 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 26: Italian Language and Culture

Giotto

Page 27: Italian Language and Culture

Giotto

Page 28: Italian Language and Culture

Giotto

Page 29: 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 30: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo

Page 31: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo

Page 32: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo: Sistine Chapel Ceiling

Page 33: Italian Language and Culture

God dividing light from darkness

Page 34: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo: Creation of the Heavenly Bodies

Page 35: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo: Separation of Land and Water

Page 36: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo: Creation of Adam

Page 37: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo: Creation of Eve

Page 38: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo: Fall of Man and Expulsion from Paradise

Page 39: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo: Sacrifice of Noah

Page 40: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo: The Flood

Page 41: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo: Drunkenness of Noah

Page 42: Italian Language and Culture

Michelangelo

Page 43: 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 44: Italian Language and Culture

Raphael

Page 45: Italian Language and Culture

Raphael

Page 46: Italian Language and Culture

Raphael

Page 47: Italian Language and Culture

Raphael

Page 48: Italian Language and Culture

Raphael

Page 49: Italian Language and Culture

Leonardo

• Leonardo, painter and natural scientist

• He embodied the Renaissance spirit of learning and intellectual curiosity

Page 50: Italian Language and Culture

Leonardo

Page 51: Italian Language and Culture

Leonardo

Page 52: Italian Language and Culture

Leonardo

Page 53: 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 54: Italian Language and Culture

Caravaggio

• Michelangelo Meresi da Caravaggio: a Revolutionary Artist

Page 55: Italian Language and Culture

Art• Italian modernist art in the

early 20th century• Giorgio di Chirico• Futurism• Metaphysical Art• 10 June, Helena Chapkova,

Italian Modernist Art

Page 56: 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 57: 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

• Polyphonic music by Palestrina

Page 58: Italian Language and Culture

Music

• Italian Baroque music• Creation of rich tonality,

elaborate musical ornamentation, new instrumental playing techniques

• Vivaldi, Scarlatti, Corelli, Marcello

• Four Seasons

Page 59: 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 60: 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 61: Italian Language and Culture

Music• Giuseppe Verdi (1813-

1901)• 23 April, Seishiro Niwa

Social Background of the Birth of Opera

• Aida, Triumphant March