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Italian Renaissance Drawings

Drawn from the two foremost collections in the field, this major exhibition features 100 exquisite drawings by Italian Renaissance artists including Raphael, Leonardo, Michelangelo and Verrocchio. This exhibition is a unique opportunity to discover the evolution of drawing which laid the foundations of the High Renaissance style of Michelangelo and Raphael.

FRA ­­­­· ANGELICO Tọ LEONARDO
ITALIAN ­· RENAISSANCE ­· DRAWINGS

From 22nd April to 25th July 2010

Where: The British Museum, London

A unique collaboration between the Uffizi in Florence and the British Museum, the display charts the increasing importance of drawing during this period, featuring works by Leonardo da Vinci, Fra Angelico, Jacopo and Gentile Bellini, Botticelli, Carpaccio, Filippo Lippi, Mantegna, Michelangelo, Verrocchio and Titian.

In 15th-century Italy there was a fundamental shift in style and artistic thinking in the use of preparatory drawings. What began as a means of preserving artistic ideas became the ideal way to perfect more naturalistic forms and perspective – a new approach by painters, sculptors and architects.

Infrared and other technology used in conservation research provide fresh insights into how drawing allowed painters to experiment and explore with a freedom not always reflected in their finished works. Examples in the exhibition show the trend towards depiction of movement and expression of emotion, often inspired by classical antiquity.

For more information see: Italian Renaissance Drawings/British Museum

Exhibition Supported by BP

Related posts:

  1. Drawing Upon Cotman
  2. Working Drawings
  3. Watteau: The Drawings at Royal Academy of Arts
  4. Touchstone
  5. The More I Draw : Exhibition in Siegen, Germany

Jennefer Hart

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