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The Art Of The Renaissance: A Renewed Love For The Human Body

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A Renewed Love for the Body
The Renaissance was a time of transformed thought and idea. Italy during this time was at the center. With this “rebirth,” Italian artists looked to ancient Greek and Roman art for inspiration. This inspiration brought a renewed love for the body.
In the early years of the Renaissance, artists’ intellectual exploration through humanism, the belief in the nature of humanity and its relationship to the natural world, began to take shape (Bombach). Artwork started to emerge that emulated the natural beauty of the human body, most often in nude form.
Many artist throughout the time of the Renaissance had started to compile a new list of vocabularies with detailed illustrations depicting the body internally and externally. These compilations were the product of new systematic anatomical studies known as, notomia and autospia (Ginn 295). Notomia, meaning dissection and autospia, meaning seeing-for-oneself the dissection of a human body, allowed artists, such as Leonardo da Vinci, Donatello, Antonio Pollaiuolo, and many more, create life-like sculptures, drawings and paintings of the human body (Ginn 295; Bombach).
Renaissance artists studied ancient Greek and Roman models to help their sculptures appear more …show more content…

The Battle of Ten Nudes, an engraving produced by Antonio Pollaiuolo, is the most renowned piece of artwork during the Renaissance for exactly that reason. A blatant portrayal of the nude adult male, this fierce battle scene provides an accurate portrayal of the muscles at work with every strain, flex, and movement (Ginn 308). Perhaps even more notable is Pollaiuolo’s study of dissected cadavers to represent realistic nudity (Zappella). In fact, he is credited as the first person to successfully, “Skin the human body in order to investigate the muscles and understand the nude in a more modern way” (qutd. in

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