Art History: Praising Sister Earth – Perceptions of Nature in Renaissance Art
Thursday, May 2, 5:30 pm
Instructor: Benjamin C. Tilghman
Thursday, May 2, 5:30 pm
Cost per class: $24 Members, $29 Non-Members
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Praising Sister Earth: Perceptions of Nature in Renaissance Art–The Renaissance witnessed the development of landscape painting and nature studies as newly important genres in European art. These new ways of representing the natural world reflected changing ways of thinking about creation and the place of humans in it. The art of Pisanello, Bellini, Giorgione, and Titian will help elucidate these changes.
Science, Religion, and Power in Renaissance Art: Dive deep into the art and practices of acclaimed Renaissance artists and the sociopolitical and historical context in which they worked. Sign up for one of the lectures below or all four.
March 21: Pulling the Purse Strings: Understanding Patronage in Renaissance Art
April 4: New Ways of Seeing: Optics, Geometry, and Perspective in Renaissance Art
April 18: Between East and West: Renaissance Art and the Islamic World
May 2: Praising Sister Earth: Perceptions of Nature in Renaissance Art
Four Week Series Cost: $90 Members, $100 Non-members
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Benjamin C. Tilghman is associate professor and chair of Art + Art History at Washington College and a member of the Material Collective, a collaborative working group of art historians that explores innovative and more humane modes of scholarship. A specialist in Medieval, Renaissance, and Islamic art, he previously worked at the Walters Art Museum and is currently chair of Chestertown’s Public Arts Committee.