<p>Renaissance artist Michelangelo was both influenced by, and strongly influenced, other great artists from his contemporary world. In this illustrated video podcast Michelangelo scholar Bill Wallace, Washington University in St. Louis, discusses his research on the artistic relationship between Michelangelo and the great Venetian master Titian and how we can use the power of imagination in combination with art historical knowledge to understand the artists&#39; time. </p><p>You&#39;ll also learn about the different colourists - Pontormo, da Volterra, Venusti - that Michelangelo worked with, his collaboration with Del Piombo, Titian&#39;s daughter Lavinia who was a great artist herself, Vasari&#39;s divergent descriptions of Michelangelo and Titian in his Lives of Artists and more.</p><p>Host: Howard Burton</p><p>Chapters:</p><p>0:00 Introduction</p><p>1:30 Michelangelo&#39;s The Fall and Titian&#39;s The Jealous Husband</p><p>8:20 Michelangelo&#39;s Rebellious Slave and Titian&#39;s St. Sebastian</p><p>9:58 The power of informed imagination to understand an artist&#39;s time</p><p>14:52 Documentary evidence on Michelangelo&#39;s encounters with Titian and his art</p><p>19:37 Michelangelo&#39;s use of influences to create radically original art</p><p>28:05 The effects of the collaboration between Michelangelo and Del Piombo</p><p>31:40 Colourist collaborators of Michelangelo: Pontormo, da Volterra, Venusti </p><p>37:45 Michelangelo&#39;s influences on Titian</p><p>39:44 Vasari&#39;s Lives of Artists and Titian&#39;s Judith and Holofernes</p><p>43:22 Titian&#39;s daughter and painter Lavinia and attribution</p><p>46:16 It&#39;s too bad Venetians never learned how to draw</p><p><br></p><p>* For essays about art by Howard Burton, visit our Exploring Art History blog: https://ideasroadshow.substack.com/.</p><p>Website: https://ideasroadshow.com/</p><p><br></p><p>The music in this podcast is licensed from Artlist.</p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p>The music in this video is licensed from ArtList.</p>

Exploring Art History

Ideas Roadshow

Ep 4. MICHELANGELO: Contemporary Artistic Impact - A conversation with Bill Wallace, Part 2

MAY 4, 202652 MIN
Exploring Art History

Ep 4. MICHELANGELO: Contemporary Artistic Impact - A conversation with Bill Wallace, Part 2

MAY 4, 202652 MIN

Description

<p>Renaissance artist Michelangelo was both influenced by, and strongly influenced, other great artists from his contemporary world. In this illustrated video podcast Michelangelo scholar Bill Wallace, Washington University in St. Louis, discusses his research on the artistic relationship between Michelangelo and the great Venetian master Titian and how we can use the power of imagination in combination with art historical knowledge to understand the artists&#39; time. </p><p>You&#39;ll also learn about the different colourists - Pontormo, da Volterra, Venusti - that Michelangelo worked with, his collaboration with Del Piombo, Titian&#39;s daughter Lavinia who was a great artist herself, Vasari&#39;s divergent descriptions of Michelangelo and Titian in his Lives of Artists and more.</p><p>Host: Howard Burton</p><p>Chapters:</p><p>0:00 Introduction</p><p>1:30 Michelangelo&#39;s The Fall and Titian&#39;s The Jealous Husband</p><p>8:20 Michelangelo&#39;s Rebellious Slave and Titian&#39;s St. Sebastian</p><p>9:58 The power of informed imagination to understand an artist&#39;s time</p><p>14:52 Documentary evidence on Michelangelo&#39;s encounters with Titian and his art</p><p>19:37 Michelangelo&#39;s use of influences to create radically original art</p><p>28:05 The effects of the collaboration between Michelangelo and Del Piombo</p><p>31:40 Colourist collaborators of Michelangelo: Pontormo, da Volterra, Venusti </p><p>37:45 Michelangelo&#39;s influences on Titian</p><p>39:44 Vasari&#39;s Lives of Artists and Titian&#39;s Judith and Holofernes</p><p>43:22 Titian&#39;s daughter and painter Lavinia and attribution</p><p>46:16 It&#39;s too bad Venetians never learned how to draw</p><p><br></p><p>* For essays about art by Howard Burton, visit our Exploring Art History blog: https://ideasroadshow.substack.com/.</p><p>Website: https://ideasroadshow.com/</p><p><br></p><p>The music in this podcast is licensed from Artlist.</p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p>The music in this video is licensed from ArtList.</p>