Yahoo Web Search

Search results

      • Traditionally, the term ‘Baroque’ defines the period from the death of Tasso (1595) to the foundation of the Accademia dell'Arcadia (1690). However, as often occurs with such periodisations, dates must be taken with some flexibility.
  1. People also ask

  2. Italian literature - Baroque, Epic, Comedy: The 17th century in Italian literature was traditionally described as a period of “decadence” in which writers who were devoid of sentiment resorted to exaggeration and tried to cloak the poverty of their subject matter beneath an exuberance of form.

  3. May 6, 2024 · The term Baroque probably ultimately derived from the Italian word barocco, which philosophers used during the Middle Ages to describe an obstacle in schematic logic. Subsequently the word came to denote any contorted idea or involuted process of thought. Another possible source is the Portuguese word barroco (Spanish barrueco ), used to ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Mar 28, 2008 · The only certainty we have is that literary historians have systematically considered the Baroque the nadir of Italian literature, and as a result it is its least studied period. The first condemnations came from the historians who promoted the later ‘Arcadia’, Muratori and Tiraboschi, who found the metaphors of the Baroque utterly extravagant.

  5. Table Of Contents. 4 Essential Forms of Italian Baroque. 1. Baroque Art. 2. Baroque Architecture. 3. Baroque Sculpture. 4. Baroque Painting. 3 Distinctive Traits. 1. Dynamic Compositions. 2. Dramatic Lighting. 3. Elaborate Ornamentation. Historical Context. Italian Baroque Period. 2 Cultural Impacts. 1. Italian Baroque Music.

  6. Klein suggests the name may be from Italian painter Federigo Barocci (1528-1612), a founder of the style. How to tell baroque from rococo, according to Fowler: "The characteristics of baroque are grandeur, pomposity, and weight; those of rococo are inconsequence, grace, and lightness."

  7. The Italian Baroque age, known in Italian as the seicento, found prominence from about 1580, around the end of the Renaissance, to 1660. It is the least understood period of Italian literary...

  8. Oct 9, 2019 · Updated on October 09, 2019. In literary studies and rhetoric, a style of writing that is extravagant, heavily ornamented, and/or bizarre. A term more commonly used to characterize the visual arts and music, baroque (sometimes capitalized) can also refer to a highly ornate style of prose or poetry.

  1. People also search for