1989
DOI: 10.2307/2540689
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:The Italian Renaissance: Culture and Society in Italy

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Cited by 20 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Italian painting originated from frescoes, while paintings of the Netherlands Renaissance had their origins in miniature paintings [8]. From Giotto onwards, Italian artists began to pursue a monumental sublime, and mostly recognized the importance of idealization, as Leonardo da Vinci believed that painters should study universal nature and apply the beautiful parts that make up the type of each thing [9]. (Memories and tradition form belief and value which can be seen in figure 1) By doing so, their mind will become like a mirror, reflecting truly all that is before them, and it will become as if it were second nature.…”
Section: Belief and Valuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Italian painting originated from frescoes, while paintings of the Netherlands Renaissance had their origins in miniature paintings [8]. From Giotto onwards, Italian artists began to pursue a monumental sublime, and mostly recognized the importance of idealization, as Leonardo da Vinci believed that painters should study universal nature and apply the beautiful parts that make up the type of each thing [9]. (Memories and tradition form belief and value which can be seen in figure 1) By doing so, their mind will become like a mirror, reflecting truly all that is before them, and it will become as if it were second nature.…”
Section: Belief and Valuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…And the war… a terrible war, of flame and steel, a war, he imagined of in terms of "rupture of the matter in the most intimate elements…" Was he foreseeing the division of the atom? [5] Fig. 5.…”
Section: Leonardo and His Propheciesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Leonardo's greatest innovation was taking well-established concepts and bringing them under direct verification of phenomena, always using his great capacity of observation, equipped with his extraordinary ability to transform what he saw in a graphic schematization of processes [5]. Leonardo laid the foundations of new experimental sciences; he stepped away from mere empirism to precepts of applied science which were apt for the general application in the industrial world.…”
Section: Leonardo the Innovatormentioning
confidence: 99%