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Croatian art

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Croatian art describes thevisual arts inCroatia, and art by Croatian artists from prehistoric times to the present. InEarly Middle Ages, Croatia was an important centre forart and architecture in south eastern Europe. There were many Croatian artists during theMedieval period, and the arts flourished during theRenaissance. Later styles in Croatia includedBaroque andRococo.

Ancient heritage

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Prehistoric art

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TheNeolithic inhabitants of the Adriatic Coast and those on thePannonian plain, developed their cultures within the boundaries of present-dayCroatia. The Neolithic is marked by the production ofceramics andsculptures with human and animal themes presented as symbolic art. In contrast to the cave paintings of thepalaeolithic age, in the more settled agricultural age, pottery became the main art form, with stylised forms and was primarily ornamental in character. Neolithic artists did not merely imitate or reproduce, but created new forms by inscribing geometrical patterns and decorations.[1]

Danilo pot, showing spiral patterns

There are alsoNeolithic excavation sites inŠčitarjevo nearZagreb,Nakovanj on thePelješac peninsula and elsewhere.

Copper Age

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Vučedol Dove, the distinctive bird-shaped pot of the Vučedol culture

Ceramics of theVučedol culture (named afterVučedol in eastern Slavonia) during the transitionalEneolithic period (3500-2300 BC) are of extraordinary quality with black colour, high glow and specific decorative geometrical cuts encrusted with white, red or yellow colours. The influence of metal working techniques can be seen as potters construct with sheets of clay giving distinct edges where surfaces meet and the final pot is burnished for a gleaming look.[1]

Neolithic figurines in moulded clay were stylized versions of human (particularly female) figures, and animals. The distinctiveVučedol Dove is a pot in the shape of a bird, somewhat stylized, with impressed patterning around its body, a double-headed axe (labrys) on its neck and three legs for stability.[1]

Bronze Age

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TheBronze AgeVinkovci culture (named after the city ofVinkovci) is recognizable by its bronzefibulas that replaced previous objects like bone needles and buttons.

IllyrianJapodes ceramics and metalwork

TheBronze culture of theIllyrians, ethno-tribal groups with distinct cultures, and art forms started to emerge from the cultures of the Copper Age. These Illyrian ethno-tribal areas were found in present-day Croatia, and Bosnia and Hercegovina. From the 7th Century BC,iron replaced bronze for tools and implements, only jewellery and art objects were still made out of bronze. The CelticHallstatt culture which bordered the Balkan region where the Illyrian ethno-tribal groups were living influenced them, but the Illyrian ethno-tribal groups formed their regional centers slightly differently.In the northern Balkan Peninsula, the Illyrian ethno-tribal groups had thecult of the dead, as evidenced from the richness of and care for burial sites, from which burial ceremonies are deduced. These burial sites show a long tradition ofcremation and burial in shallow graves. In the southern Balkan Peninsula, the Illyrian tribes buried their dead under large heaps stone, or earthtumuli (known locally asgromile). TheIllyrianJapodes tribes had an affinity for decoration with heavy, oversized necklaces made with yellow, blue or white glass paste and they are known for their large ornamented bronzefibulas,[1] spiral bracelets,diadems, andhelmets made out of bronze. Small sculptures ofjade made from thearchaicIonian plastic are also found in Japodian tribal areas. Numerous monumental sculptures are preserved, as well as walls of acitadel calledNezakcij near present-dayPula, one of the numerous Istrian cities fromIron Age.

Arrival of the Celts

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The 4th century BC saw the firstCelts arrive into the Illyrian areas of the Balkans; with them they brought the technique of thepottery wheel, new styles of fibulas and different bronze and iron belts, which the local Illyrian tribes had not previously developed. The Celts also mixed with the Illyrian tribal groups in Slavonia, Istria, and Dalmatia.

Antiquity

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Greek colonies

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Greek sailors and merchants from the Greek City States of the south of the Balkan peninsula reached almost every part of Mediterranean including the Adriatic Sea coast of present-day Croatia. Other Greeks came fromSyracuse onSicily in 390 BC to the islands of Vis (Issa),Hvar (Pharos), andKorčula (Corcyra Nigra) foundingcity-states amongst the Illyrian ethno-tribal groups. Trading cities were founded on theAdriatic Coast such asTragurion (today calledTrogir),Salona (today calledSolin near present-daySplit),Epetion (today calledStobreč).[2]

4th-century BCPraxitelean bronze head of a goddess wearing alunate crown, found at Issa (Vis, Croatia)

These Greek cities were laid out geometrically and hadvillas, harbours, public buildings, temples and theatres. Pharos and Issa were strong Greek City States that showed their independence with their own coinage and maritime fleets. Unfortunately, besides painted pots and ceramictanagra sculptures, there are few remaining daily living materials from this culture. Two of those are: theCroatian Apoxyomenos, and theBronze head of goddess Artemis from the Greek City State of Issa, which dates from the 4th century BC. Another example is astone relief of Kairos (god of joyfulness) from the Greek City-State Tragurion, which dates from the 3rd Century BC, and is associated with the famous Greek sculptorLysippos.[2]

But aside from the superficial contact of trade and warfare, life for the Greek colonists was isolated from the surrounding Illyrian peoples. The Hellenistic culture of the Greek enclaves existed in parallel with the late iron age culture of the wider Illyro-Celtic population. On the mainland the Illyrian ethno-tribal groups were organizing their centers. Illyrian art became influenced by Greek Art, and the Illyrian ethno-tribal groups copied the styles and methods of the Greeks.[2] This can be seen, for example in theDaors tribe of theNeretva Delta.

Roman urbanization

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In the 3rd century BC, theRomans took over the Greek colonial cities and by the 1st century BC had also subdued the Illyrians, and organized the entire coastal territory by setting up urban cities. Following the conquest, the area became a province of the Roman Empire. Numerous rustic villas, and new urban settlements (the most impressive areVerige inBrijuni,Pula and Trogir - formerly Tragurion) demonstrate high level of Romanurbanization. There were at least 30 urban cities acrossIstria,Liburnia andDalmatia with Roman citizenship (civitas). The best-preserved Roman grid-pattern street layouts (decumanus/cardo) are those inEpetion (Poreč) andJader (Zadar). The best preserved Roman monuments are inPola (Pula); founded in the 1st century dedicated toJulius Caesar, it is full of classicalRoman art such as: stonewalls, two city gates, two temples on theForum, and remains of two theatres, as well as theArch from the year 30 AD, and the temple of Augustus build in 2-14 AD, and finally the FluvianAmphitheatre (so called – Arena) from the 2nd century.[2]

The Salona girl, marble head from Salona, 3rd century AD (Archaeological Museum in Zagreb)

By the 3rd century AD,Salona was the largest and most important city of Dalmatia, with 40,000 inhabitants. Nearby, the EmperorDiocletian, who was born in Salona, built his retirement palace (in approx 300 AD), one of the largest and most important monuments of late antique architecture. On its pathways,cellars,domes,mausoleums,arcades and courtyards can be seen numerous different art influences from the entire Empire.Some of the sculptures are:the head of a boy, girl and a woman from Salona,monumental figure of Minerva fromVaraždin,the head of Hercules fromSinj,sculptures of Roman emperors fromNin andVid nearMetković,damaged sculpture of emperor inZagreb Museum etc.

In the 4th century Salona became the centre ofChristianity for the entire westernBalkans. It had numerousbasilicas and necropolises, and even two saints:Domnius (Duje) andAnastasius (Staš). One of the few preserved basilicas in western Europe from the time of earlyByzantium is theEuphrasian Basilica inPoreč from the 6th century.

The early Middle Ages brought thegreat migration of the Slavs and this period was perhaps aDark Age in the cultural sense until the successful formation of the Slavic states which coexisted with Italic cities that remained on the coast, each of them were modelled likeVenice.

Medieval Croatian art

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Early Middle Ages

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Main article:Croatian Pre-Romanesque art and architecture
Croatian interlace relief with inscription of kingDržislav, Kapitul in today's Knin, 10th century

In the 7th century theCroats, with otherSlavs andAvars, came from Eastern Europe to the area of the former Roman provinces of Pannonia, Dalmatia and Istria where they live up to the present day.[3] The Croats were an Iron Age nomadic culture, so avoiding the urban centres they instead settled in the countryside around the Roman cities, for example on an island in the riverJadro near RomanSalona.[4]

Croatian dignitary, 11th century,Knin area

During the 7th and 8th centuries there was a trend of constructing smaller buildings from the material and decorative elements of ruined older Roman buildings. During the 9th century, parallel with the establishment of Croatian principalities, new architecture of pre-Romanesque characteristics emerged. It was based on numerous influences of which the Frankish and Byzantine were the strongest. Gradually those inherited influences evolved into a more original form of architecture.[5]Altar screens and carved stone windows in those churches were decorated with the shallow interweavingornamentation which we callCroatian interlace. In general, the appearance of interlace reliefs in a building indicates a date before 1100.[5]

Motifs of this interlace are often of classical origin (waves, three-string interlace, pentagrams, net of rhomboids etc.), but while in Roman art it was only used as a frame, here it covers the entire surface. The sheer number and quality of these stone monuments indicates a rich masonry tradition with numerous masters and workshops on the east coast of the Adriatic. Croatian interlace was originally painted in bright colours of red, blue and yellow. Since the wall paintings that are mentioned in several literal sources (for example the portraits of the Trpimirović dynasty in the church of St. George in Putalj aboveKaštel Sućurac) are not preserved, they are only type of pre-Romanesque Croatian painting.

Illuminated page from abbessVekenega's evangelistary, c. 1096

Sometimes the interlace was replaced by Biblical figures (as in the altar screen of the Sveta Nedjelja Church in Zadar), but the figures are flattened and depicted with stylized graphic lines. FromCrown Church ofKing Zvonimir (so-calledHollow Church inSolin) comes the altar screen with thefigure of the Croatian King on the throne withCarolingian crown, a servant by his side and a bowing subject. Linear cuts representing the folds of the robes are similar to the lines on their faces, and also on those on the frame. Today the board is a part ofSplitcathedralbaptistery.[5]

Out of the crafted objects of the time, manyreliquaries are still preserved.[6] Believed to have magical powers of healing, they were usually shaped for the body part they contained.[7] That is why therelic of Saint James's head in Zadar is shaped like a head; the tube part has section with stream of arcades with single saint in every one, while a dome-like cover is decorated with medallions bearing symbols of evangelist and Christ on the top.

A significant number of churchcodices from this time have survived. InZagreb there is a Liber psalmorum which was illuminated inBenedictine style byprior Majon for archbishop Paul of Split (c. 1015–1030). In theVatican there is a Breviary, also inMonte Cassino Benedictine style (initials of intertwined leaves, interlace and animal heads) which originates from monastery of St. Nicola in Osor. The same style of illumination we can found in Breviars inTrogir,Šibenik andDubrovnik but there are many that were recorded (like 47 books in only one church in monastery of St. Peter in Seka) but not preserved.

Romanesque art

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Trogir Cathedral: March is shown as a Roman soldier (the god Mars)

EarlyRomanesque art appeared in Croatia at the beginning of the 11th century with the introduction ofmonasteries and churches by theBenedictian order ofMonte Cassino.[8] Two important churches of the time are St Benedict (later St Euphemia) in Split, and St Mary in Zadar, while St. Peter inSupetarska Draga on the island ofRab (11th century) is the best preserved church of the type in Croatia.[8]

Many cathedrals can be found along the Croatian coast and nearby lands: in Istria, Dalmatia, and Primorje. Cities such asPoreč,Rab,Zadar,Trogir andSplit were built along the Dalmatian coast with stone houses and large imposing churches with three naves, three apses, columns, arches, arcades and a wooden roof. Cathedrals were built inSenj,Krk, Rab, Zadar, Trogir, Dubrovnik and Zagreb.

In Croatian Romanesque sculpture, there was a move away from interlace to figurative reliefs (for example the reliefs in St Domenica’s in Zadar).[8]

Two outstanding works of Romanesque sculpture date from the first half of the 13th century: the wooden entry doors of theSplit cathedral byAndrija Buvina (1214) and the main portal ofTrogir cathedral done byMaster Radovan (c. 1240).

Carved wooden doors on theCathedral of St. Duje, Split by Andrija Buvina

Carved wooden doors from the Romanesque period are relatively rare, as few of them have survived. Buvina’s huge double doors depict the life of Christ in 28 relief panels, each set within a double frame with interwoven vines and scrollwork ornamentation. The scenes are an original design, drawing their inspiration equally from the art of Western miniatures and Eastern Byzantine icons. The carving is precise and clean, leaving each scene easily understood. Also in Split cathedral, the carving on the wooden choir stalls dates to the mid-13th century, with beautiful Romanesque motifs of interwoven vines, figures of saints and a smallbestiary. An early Gothic feature here is the introduction of a woodcarver at work, possibly a self-portrait.[8]

Trogir cathedral, Radovan's portal

Although the main portal of Trogir cathedral was not completed until the 14th century, it is clearly Romanesque in form, but with a new Gothichumanist tendency in the carvings.[8] The date for the portal is generally given as 1240, which is when Master Radovan carved his name as part of the latin inscription. The portal has a semi-circulartympanum set within a recessed frame with rounded arches in the Romanesque style. The large main figures are sculptures ofAdam and Eve, borne on lions supported by plinths. Scenes from the life of Christ from theAnnunciation to theResurrection appear in the arches above the door, with the Nativity occupying the central position of the tympanum, which was unusual for the time. It is a reflection of the spirit of the new Gothic age to replace the dire warning of the Last Judgement above the doorway, with a message of love and hope.[8]

Radovan: scenes of everyday life butchering the pig (above) and making sausages

Down both sides of the portal is a sequence of reliefs representing the months of the year. The figures here are particularly animated, and the scenes are taken from contemporary life. For example, December is shown as the month to butcher the pig and make sausages, followed by January where an old man sits by the fireside cooking, while a young man pours wine from an amphora in a reference to Aquarius the water carrier. The realism of such scenes, and the representation of everyday life of the people is a move to Gothic ideas, with its focus on contemporary humanist issues and real characters.[8]

Paintings in Croatia from this time includefrescoes, paintings on wood panels andilluminated manuscripts. The early Romanesque frescoes in St Michael inSton date to the 11th/12th century, and are related to the Benedictine Abbey of St Michael onMonte Gargano. Sadly only fragments of the Ston frescoes still survive, a series of biblical figures, portrayed full-face, dressed in richly ornamented robes. In typical early Romanesque style, the figures are static, described with lines, without much depth or form in the background.[9] The Zadar Benedictine church has 12th century frescoes in a similar style, but not so brightly coloured and less linear. Meanwhile in Istria, there are different fresco styles and influences to be seen from the 12th century. The westernOttonian style of art (St Michael int Kloštar atLim Bay), ByzantineComnenian style from theAquileia workshop (St Jerome’s church in Hum), and a combination of both western and Byzantine styles (St. Foška at Batvači nearPeroj).[10]

Paintings of the time on wood were generally icons of the Virgin Mary with Child or of the Crucifixion. There are six surviving RomanesqueVirgin with Child icons in Croatia, the oldest of which is the Madonna from Saint Sylvester’s Church on the island ofBiševo (1220), now inHvar Cathedral[11] The figures of mother and child are Byzantine in style, combined with a typical Romanesque use of line and colour. Two painted crucifixes from the Franciscan Abbey in Zadar are even older, as are some early Romanesque crucifixes from Istrian churches.[8]

Although the oldestilluminated miniature in Croatia dates from the 8th century,[12] they are extremely rare until the 11th century. Examples from around that time include the ŠibenikSacramentary andEvangelistary written inCarolingian minuscule, and fragments of a Evangelistary from Rab written inBeneventana. The illuminations in these manuscripts are just simple initials with scrolls and animal heads, but by the 13th century, manuscripts from Trogir, Split and Zagreb contain much more complex illustrations, including entire Biblical scenes taking up most of a page.[8]

Gothic art

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Decorative carvings by Juraj Dalmatinac onŠibenik Cathedral) are a successful fusion of gothic and renaissance styles

Gothic art in the 14th century was supported by a culture of city councils, religious orders (such as theFranciscans), and the nobility. It was the golden age of free Dalmatian cities that were trading with Croatian feudal nobility in the continent. Urban organization and evolution of Dalmatian cities can be followed through the continued development and expansion ofRab andTrogir, the regulation of streets inDubrovnik, and the integration ofSplit.

At the end of the 15th century, the majority of the coastal region was administered by Venice, and churches,palaces,cloisters,loggias, clock towers and fountains began to appear, which were influenced by Venetian Gothic: not just in structure and construction, but on the emphasis of decorative elements. The master of the Gothic style wasJuraj Dalmatinac (George of Dalmatia), builder ofŠibenik Cathedral.[13] The form and the decorative elements of the Cathedral, such as a remarkable frieze decorated with 71 sculptured faces of men, women, and children, illustrates the successful fusion of Gothic and Renaissance art.[14] The cathedral also shows the considerable interchange of art and architecture knowledge between Northern Italy, Dalmatia and Tuscany in the 15th and 16th centuries.[14] Juraj Dalmatinac also worked in Split (Chapel ofSt. Anastasius in theCathedral), Dubrovnik, Zadar andAncona, while his followers spread theVenetian Gothic style throughout the whole of Dalmatia.

Franciscan Monastery,Dubrovnik, 14th century cloister animal carvings

TheFranciscan friary, Dubrovnik was built by Mihoje Brajkov of Bar in 1360. Much of the original building was destroyed in theearthquake of 1667, but the cloisters and the carved church portal remain. The lower cloister was built in Romanesque/Gothic style where the capitals are constructed in Romanesque form, but the carvings on them are lively creatures modelled with a Gothic realism.[15] The portal was sculpted in 1498 in Gothic style by the workshop of the brothers Leonard and Petar Petroviċ. The almost life-sized Pietà in the central lunette is flanked by the figures of St. Jerome (holding a model of the pre-earthquake church) and St. John the Baptist. On top of the lunette stands the figure of the Father Creator. Also in Dubrovnik, the oldRector’s Palace (1435) was built in Gothic style by Onofrio della Cava, who was also responsible for two fountains, which are still in use today.[13]

Portal ofSt. Mark's Church, Zagreb with gothic statues

TheChurch of St Mark in Zagreb was radically reconstructed in the second half of the 14th century in Late Gothic style. The main portal contains a series of carved figures of St Mark, Christ, Madonna and the twelve apostles. On top are the statues of Joseph and Mary with the infant Jesus, and below them stand St. Mark and the Lion. The twelve Apostles are placed on both sides of the portal (four wooden statues have replaced original ones which were destroyed). Originally the entire portal was painted in vivid colours. The portal is considered to be the work of sculptors of the Parler family from Prague (end of the 14th century).[15]

Chest of St Simeon (1380),Zadar by Francesco Milano

One of the most outstanding works of art from the 14th century in Dalmatia is the large silver chest made for the relics ofSt Simeon in Zadar (1377-1380), with a portrait of the saint himself on the lid. The chest is covered with relief scenes, of which only one (the Presentation in the Temple) is biblical. The St Simeon reliquary crosses the boundary between the western Gothic style and Byzantine.[15]

Some outstanding Gothic frescoes are still preserved in churches across Istria. The small cemetery church of St. Nicholas in Rakotule contains some early examples of Venetian origin.[15] Scenes fromSt Nicholas’ life are depicted in a range of colours and shades, using firm strokes to denote character and volume. The figures are active, and their faces have distinctive features, while details of the background are clearly taken from contemporary life.[16]

Beram, Dance Macabre

Possibly the best-known series of late Gothic frescoes in Istria is in the Church of St Mary on the Rocks (Sv Marija na Škriljinah) near Beram, dating from 1474. Painted by Vincent of Kastav, the frescoes cover the entire interior of the church in a series of 46 panels. The largest composition (8m long) is TheAdoration of the Magi, high on the northern wall. The figures appear three-dimensional, within the illusion of space. Across the back wall, the cycle of life panels conclude with theDanse Macabre (Dance of Death), in which everyone meets their fate - rich or poor, all must die in the end. Scenes of this typically gothic humanist theme were painted in many places across Europe at the time, although not all have survived to this extent. The frescoes of St Marys in Beram remain largely as originally painted, and are amongst the finest works of medieval art in Istria[17]

Paolo Veneziano,Crucifixion, 1350c Dominican Church, Dubrovnik

A series of paintings of exceptional quality on wood are reliably attributed toPaolo Veneziano one of the best-known painters in the Venetian Republic. His work brings a Gothic element toByzantine iconography, using long elegant figures and subtle colours in his signature style. His works in Croatia includepolyptychs (composite altarpieces), paintings in Zadar and Trogir, and the large Crucifixion in the Dominican church in Dubrovnik, which includes separate panels for the Virgin Mary and St John.[15]

One distinctive feature of paintings by local artists from coastal Croatia is a red background in place of the costlier gold. The red brings an appropriate warmth to the Gothic style paintings, as the gold would also have had a red under-painting. One such example is the Crucifixion in the monastery church at Tkon (island ofPašman).[15]There were two trends for paintings on wood in Croatia during the 14th century: one continued with strict linearity to depict volume, while the other used colour to create a more subtle form. In the painting “Mother of God with Child and Donor” in Zadar, the donor himself is shown. As in other European icons of the time, the donor is small. This is an early representation of secular human figures in a religious painting. Such figures were to increase in size, until the human figures achieved their own importance in the Renaissance portrait of the 15th century.[15] Zadar was an important centre for Gothic culture (and painting in particular), which emanated and spread to other Dalmatian communities.[18]

Illumination fromHrvoje's Missal written in Split, 1404.

From that time come two of the best and most finely decoratedilluminatedliturgies done by monks from Split, –Hvals' Zbornik (today in Zagreb), andHrvoje's Missal (now inIstanbul). The Missal was written in Split by the residentcalligrapher and glagolitic scribe, Butko, in 1404 forHrvoje Vukčić Hrvatinić,Ban (Viceroy) of Bosnia and Duke of Split. The miniatures are believed to have been painted by a local artist and were done around 1407 in Split, as contemporary events and scenery have been incorporated into the illustrations. Amidst the biblical scenes and allegories are two full-sheet paintings with a non-religious subject – the Duke himself as a chivalric knight on horseback, and his coat of arms. Hrvoje's Missal is an important document both for the Glagolithic script and for the introduction of portraiture into what is essentially a religious book.[15]

Renaissance

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Main article:Renaissance in Croatia

The Renaissance period of art and architecture in Croatia can be said to begin in 1441, when Juraj Dalmatinac was contracted to work onŠibenik Cathedral, and continued to the end of the 16th century.[19] At the time, much of the Croatian coast was administered by theVenetian Republic, and there was a thriving interchange of ideas and skills between Italy and the eastern Adriatic, particularly Dalmatia. As the interior of Croatia came under Austrian Hapsburg rule, and increasingly suffered invasion by theOttomans, the focus was more on fortifications, less on artwork. Under these circumstances, theItalian Renaissance only flourished in coastal Croatia with significant new religious and public architecture in Dalmatia clearly influenced by the new style, but in an original way. Three important works from that period contributed to further development of theRenaissance:Šibenik Cathedral, the Chapel of Blessed John inTrogir Cathedral, and Sorkočević's villa in Dubrovnik.

Šibenik Cathedral baptistery ceiling byJuraj Dalmatinac

As Juraj Dalmatinac took over responsibility for the building of Šibenik Cathedral, among his first works was in thebaptistry, where he introduced elements inspired byBrunelleschi andDonatello. The soft modelling on the carved figures and the flowing movement are clearly Renaissance, as are the proportions of the baptistry itself. The reliefs on the ceiling show God the Father with a very Renaissance laurel wreath, surrounded by angels and seraphim, and an infant being baptized by a priest. This substitution of human figures in place of Christ and John the Baptist in the Jordan is a reflection of the new humanist trend.[19] These elements are creatively combined with Gothic features for a harmonious overall effect. As mentioned in the previous section, Juraj Dalmatinac is considered a master of blending Gothic with Renaissance.[14] His successors on the Šibenik project wereAndrija Aleši, one of his students, andNikola Firentinac, who was responsible for completing the cathedral according to Juraj’s original plans.

Chapel of the Blessed Giovanni Orsini,Trogir cathedral.St John the Evangelist byIvan Duknović (left), St James byNikola Firentinac (right)

In 1468, construction began on the expansion of the Chapel of the BlessedJohn of Trogir inTrogir Cathedral. The three principal sculptors were Nikola Firentinac, Andrija Aleši andIvan Duknović. The chapel has a barrel vault with God and angels’ faces, below which is a row of circular windows and three tiers of carved figures surrounding the shrine. The quality of the sculptures of Christ, Mary and the apostles in their individual niches, with reliefs of playfulputti above and below make the chapel a memorable example of Renaissance art.[20] Among the finest statues are Duknović'sJohn the Evangelist, and Firentinac’sSt Paul. The Gothic sarcophagus and Baroque angels are a later addition.

Inside the protective walls of theRepublic of Dubrovnik, and on several of the nearby islands, manyRagusan nobles built their country retreats, elegant villas set in renaissance gardens. These were not as ornate as theirItalian counterparts, but made good use of the terrain with its seaside location and plentiful supply of stone.[21] A fine example isSorkočević's villa on the island ofLapad near Dubrovnik. Built in 1521, with an unusual asymmetrical design, the house and garden are preserved in their original form.

Flagellation of Christ (1428) byJuraj Dalmatinac,Split Cathedral

One of the most beautiful Renaissance sculptures in Croatia is perhaps the relief of theFlagellation of Christ by Juraj Dalmatinac on the altar of St Anastasius inSplit cathedral. In contrast to the static carving on the altar opposite, three almost naked figures are caught in dynamic movement.[20][22]

Model ofDubrovnik held bySt Blaise in this detail from a triptych byNikola Božidarević

During the 15th and 16th centuries, art flourished in Dubrovnik’s religious institutions, public buildings and its many patrician residences. Although a great deal of the work was commissioned from well-known artists from Italy, much of it was done by locally-born artists. The preferred style of church paintings in Dubrovnik, even into the renaissance period, was still framed in the form of atriptych, orpolyptych.[23] But within that structure, new ideas and designs were introduced, such as portraits depicting real characters,linear perspective, and even some still lifes.[19] The artists of the Dubrovnik Painting School, such asNikola Božidarević,[24][25]Lovro Dobričević and his sonVicko Lovrin,Mihajlo Hamzić,Blaž Jurijev Trogiranin andIvan Ugrinović, began a tradition of art in the city that continues to the present.[13] Sadly, much of Dubrovnik’s beautiful Romanesque and Renaissance artwork was destroyed in the earthquake of 1667 and the resulting fires, and most of it we know only from documents in the Dubrovnik State Archives.

One Croatian artist who worked mainly in northern Italy wasGiorgio Schiavone (orJuraj Ćulinović), who was born inSkradin in Dalmatia and went on to work withFrancesco Squarcione inPadua. Today, his paintings are held by several prestigious galleries worldwide, and he is considered the most important Croatian painter of the 15th century.[26][22] Other famous Croatian-born Renaissance artists that lived and worked abroad, were the Laurana brothers,Francesco (Franjo Vranjanin) andLuciano (Luka Vranjanin), the miniaturistGiulio Clovio (Juraj Klović), engraver and portrait painterMartin Rota (Martin Kalunić-Rota) andmannerist painterAndrea Schiavone (Andrija Medulić).

Baroque and Rococo

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Painting from the altar ofZagreb Cathedral, dated c. 1690, attributed toBernardo Bobić

Going into the 17th century, there was a shift of artistic activity away from the coastal region towards inland, continental Croatia. As part of theVenetian Republic, Dalmatia began to rely increasingly on importing art and artists from Italy, particularly Rome and Venice. Meanwhile as the invadingOttomans were pushed back, the north would gradually emerge from a century of war, to improve fortifications, rebuild devastated towns, and enjoy a revival of the arts.[27]

There were few Croatian artists and architects producing high quality work during the period. Between the slow recovery of the inland population after the war, and the preference in the coastal regions to employ foreign artists and sculptors, it was mainly Italians, Austrian and Slovenes who created and decorated the many Baroque buildings in Croatia.[27] There was a significant increase in the commissioning of large baroque altars in multi-coloured marble with ornate carving. These were mainly imported from Italy, and replaced the existing stone or wood altars.

The ornate Baroque style originated in Rome as a reaction to the counter-reformation in northern Europe, and the Jesuits played a major role in introducing it to Croatia.[27] Large imposing churches were built in numerous places across the country, with accompanying colleges. The most important sites were in Zagreb, Rijeka, and Dubrovnik.

Baroque interior ofSt. Catherine's Church, Zagreb, 1632

St. Catherine's Church, Zagreb is one of the most outstanding examples of Baroque Jesuit architecture in northern Croatia, with its elaborate interior decoration.[28] Completed in 1632, it was renovated in the 18th century following a major fire. The ornate stucco ceiling is by Anton Joseph Quadrio (1721), with frescoes of the heavens byGiulio Quaglio the Younger. Behind the altar is a largetrompe l’oeil fresco by Krištof Andrej Jelovšek (1762). The six side chapels have two altars each, the finest by sculptorFrancesco Robba.[27]

The biggest Baroque project was the rebuilding of renaissanceDubrovnik after the catastrophicearthquake of 1667 when almost the entire city was destroyed. Many of its churches and public buildings were constructed from the ground up in the new Baroque style, for example the new cathedral, the Jesuit college with the church ofSt Ignatius, and the church of St Vlaho on the main square (1715) which shaped the southeastern section of the city.Pietro Passalaqua[23] united the new baroque areas with hisJesuit Stairway, (reminiscent of the famousSpanish Steps in Rome) which led to theIvan Gundulić Square below.

Saint Andrew among the Saints Batholomew, Carlo Borromeo, Lucy and Apollonia (1710-16) byFederico Bencovich

During the Baroque numerous churches were built across Croatia. One of the most beautiful is the church ofMaria of the Snow inBelec from 1740 with the entire interior filled with livelygilded wooden sculptures, and frescoes by the painterIvan Ranger from Austria. He was a classicRococo painter whose figures were softly painted in graceful positions in cheerful colours.

The most important baroque painter of Dalmatian origin wasFederico Bencovich,[27] who studied underCarlo Cignani inBologna. Other Croatian-born artists of the time include painterBernardo Bobić, who worked mainly in Zagreb and northern Croatia,Matteo Ponzone, who was probably born on the island of Rab,[22] and worked primarily in Italy, andTripo Kokolja of Kotor who was active in Dalmatia.[27]

The 19th century

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Une fleur byVlaho Bukovac, 1887, Private collection

Two crucial European events shaped the influences on Croatia towards the end of the 18th century. The fall of theVenetian Republic in 1797 was followed by the Napoleonic conquest and formation of the short-livedIllyrian Provinces from 1809 to 1814. Afterwards, all of Croatia was ruled by theAustrian Empire, and remained so until theFirst World War. During that time,neoclassical was the style for grand buildings, andRomanticism flourished in the arts, with its emphasis on the glories of nature and authenticity of folk art.[29] In the houses of ordinary people, simple decoration and cheerful colours prevailed, andBiedermeier furniture became popular. Artistic life within Croatia was now focused on Zagreb, with strong connections toViennese culture andCentral Europe. It was not until much later in the century that Croatian artists began to go wider afield to study — to Munich, Prague and Paris.

Roman woman with a lute byVjekoslav Karas, ca. 1846,Croatian History Museum

At the same time, the cities of Croatia got an important urban makeover. For size and importance, the urban redesign of Zagreb's centre (largely the work ofMilan Lenuzzio, 1860–1880) was revolutionary. Between the longest street,Ilica, and the new railway, streets were laid out in a grid pattern with large public and social buildings, such as theneo-RenaissanceCroatian Academy of Sciences and Arts (F. Scmidt, 1884), the neo-baroqueCroatian National Theatre (H. Helmer and F. Fellner, 1895), and the very modernArt Pavilion (1898) with montage construction of steel and glass – Croatian "Crystal Palace", and finally the masterpiece ofArt NouveauThe National Library (Lubinski, finished in 1912). This urban plan is bounded by series of parks andparkways decorated with numerous fountains, sculptures, avenues and gardens (known as the "Green Horseshoe").

The Croats arrival at the Adriatic Sea byOton Iveković, 1905

The building that emphasizes all three visual arts is the former Ministry ofWorship and Education, now the Croatian Institute of History in Zagreb (Hermann Bollé, 1895). Along with rooms in Pompeii style and renaissance cabinet, the large neo-baroque"Golden Hall" contains historic paintings byBela Čikoš-Sesija (TheBaptism of Croats and Split Council),Oton Iveković (Meeting of Koloman and Croatian Nobility),Mato Celestin Medović (The Arrival of Croats),Vlaho Bukovac (Franz Joseph in Zagreb) and decorated with reliefs byRobert Frangeš-Mihanović. "The Golden Hall" became a unified monument to its time, one of few in Europe.

Zrnovnica II byMenci Klement Crnčić

Realism appeared in the bourgeois portraits byVjekoslav Karas.[29] The characters of his portraits are true expressions of their time. Realistic landscapes are linked to certain parts of the country – Slavonian forests by artists ofOsijek school, Dubrovnik in works ofCelestin Medović, and Dalmatian coast in works ofMenci Klement Crnčić.

In sculpture the hard realism (naturalism) ofIvan Rendić was replaced byArt Nouveau composed and moving reliefs byRobert Frangeš-Mihanović.Slava Raškaj is particularly notable for her watercolours.

Vlaho Bukovac brought the spirit ofImpressionism from Paris, and he strongly influenced the young artists (including the authors of "Golden Hall"). Right after he painted the screen in HNK in Zagreb with the theme ofCroatian Illyrian Movement, and symbolic portraits of Croatian Writers in National Library, he foundedThe Society of Croatian Artists (1897), the so-called "Zagreb's colorful school". With this society theCroatian Modern Art started. On theMillennium Exhibition inBudapest they were able to set aside all other artistic options inAustria-Hungary.

The 20th century

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Main article:Croatian art of the 20th century
Self-portrait with Dog (Autoportret sa psom) byMiroslav Kraljević (1910)Modern Gallery, Zagreb

Modern art in Croatia began with thesecessionist ideas spreading fromVienna andMunich, andPost-Impressionism from Paris.[30] TheMunich Circle used values to create volume in their paintings, in a style much simplified from more detailed earlier, academic style.[31] TheMedulic Society ofsculptors and painters fromSplit brought themes of national history and legends to their art,[32] and some of the artwork following the First World War contained a strong political message against the rulingAustro-Hungarian state. TheZagreb Spring Salon provided an annual showcase of the local art scene, and a big change was noticeable in 1919 with a move to flatter forms, and signs ofCubism andexpressionism were evident.[33] Theavant-gardeZenit Group of the 1920s pushed for integrating the new art forms with the native cultural identity.[34] At the same time, theEarth Group sought to reflect reality and social issues in their art,[33] a movement that also saw the development ofnaive art.[35] The 1930s saw a return to more simple, classical styles.[33]

Following the Second World War, artists everywhere were searching for meaning and identity, leading toabstract expressionism in the U.S. and artinformel in Europe.[36] In the new Yugoslavia, the communistsocial realism style never took hold, butExat 51 showed the way withgeometric abstraction in paintings and simplified spaces in architecture.[33]

In the 1950s,Antun Motika, one of the most celebrated modern Croatian artists together withIvan Meštrović, generated a strong reaction from the critics with his exhibition of drawingsArchaic Surrealism (Arhajski nadrealizam).[37] The exhibition had a lasting effect on Croatian art circles,[38] and is generally considered to be the boldest rejection of the dogmatic frameworks of socialist realism in Croatia.[37]

TheGorgona Group of the 1960s advocated non-conventional forms of visual expression, published their own anti-magazine, and were preoccupied by the absurd.[39] At the same time, theNew Tendencies series of exhibits held in conjunction with meetings displayed a more analytical approach to art,[40] and a move towardsNew Media, such as photography, video, computer art, performance art and installations, focused more on the artists' process.[41] TheBiafra Group of the 1970s wasfigurative andexpressionist, engaging their audience directly.[36] By the 1980s, theNew Image movement brought a return to more traditional painting and images.[36]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdeRadovan Ivančević (ed.)."Traces of Prehistoric Communities".culturenet.hr web portal to Croatian culture. Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia. Retrieved25 March 2021.
  2. ^abcdRadovan Ivančević (ed.)."Antiquity: Greek colonization of the Eastern Adriatic (4th to 2nd centuries BC); Roman Urbanisation (2nd century BC to 5th century)".culturenet.hr web portal to Croatian culture. Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia. Retrieved25 March 2021.
  3. ^Sedov, Valentin V. (1995)."Slavs in the Early Middle Ages".Rastko.org.rs. Project Rastko. Archived fromthe original on 11 November 2013. Retrieved25 March 2010.
  4. ^Holcomb, Melanie."Barbarians and Romans".Metmuseum.org.Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved25 March 2010.
  5. ^abcRadovan Ivančević (ed.)."The First Croatian State (Pre-romanesque (9th to 11th centuries)".culturenet.hr web portal to Croatian culture. Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia. Retrieved25 March 2021.
  6. ^Drake Boehm, Barbara."Relics and Reliquaries in Medieval Christianity".Metmuseum.org.Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved25 March 2010.
  7. ^"CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Reliquaries". Newadvent.org. 1911. Retrieved25 March 2010.
  8. ^abcdefghiRadovan Ivančević (ed.)."The Renewal of Towns and Raising of Monasteries: Romanesque (11th and 12th centuries)".culturenet.hr web portal to Croatian culture. Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia. Retrieved25 March 2021.
  9. ^Goss, Vladimir P (1987).Early Croatian Architecture: A study of the Pre-Romanesque(PDF). Gerald Duckworth & Co. Ltd, London.ISBN 0-7156-21491. Retrieved2 April 2021.{{cite book}}:|website= ignored (help)
  10. ^Željko Bistrović (2009)."Pre-Romanesque and Romanesque Wall Paintings in Istria".ResearchGate. Istria County Conservation Department in Pula. Retrieved2 April 2021.
  11. ^"Geotrail Biševo: Saint Sylvester's Church". Geopark Vis Archipelago. Retrieved3 April 2021.One of the oldest paintings of Madonna in Croatia, the work of the proto-Venetian painting style from the 13th century (dated 1220), was preserved in this church on Biševo
  12. ^Galović, Tomislav (2017)."Evangeliarium Spalatense / Splitski evangelijar – najstarija i najsvetija knjiga u Hrvata (tematski uvodnik)".Hrvatska revija (in Croatian). No. 4.Matica hrvatska. Retrieved4 February 2020.
  13. ^abc"Cultural Heritage: Croatian Art History". Republic of Croatia Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs. Retrieved3 April 2021.
  14. ^abc"UNESCO World Heritage List: The Cathedral of St James in Šibenik".UNESCO United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. 2000. Retrieved6 April 2021.The structural characteristics of the Cathedral of St James in Šibenik make it a unique and outstanding building in which Gothic and Renaissance forms have been successfully blended
  15. ^abcdefghRadovan Ivančević (ed.)."The Age of Free Cities, Nobility and Preaching Orders: Gothic (13th and 14th centuries)".culturenet.hr web portal to Croatian culture. Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia. Retrieved25 March 2021.
  16. ^"The Church of St Nicholas, Rakotule".Istra Culture. Istria Tourist Board. Retrieved5 April 2021.
  17. ^Radovan Ivančević (ed.)."Art: Istria: Beram".culturenet.hr web portal to Croatian culture. Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia. Retrieved7 April 2021.
  18. ^Emil Hilje."Gothic Painting in Zadar".University of Zadar. Retrieved10 April 2021.
  19. ^abcRadovan Ivančević (ed.)."The Divergent Paths of the North and South: Renaissance (15th and 16th centuries)".culturenet.hr web portal to Croatian culture. Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia. Retrieved25 March 2021.
  20. ^abEkserdjian, David (2009). "The Renaissance in Croatia and Italy: The Chapel of the Blessed Giovanni Orsini".Croatia: Aspects of Art, Architecture and Cultural Heritage. Frances Lincoln Ltd, London. p. 98.ISBN 978-0-7112-2921-1.
  21. ^Mladen Obad Šćitaroci (1996)."The Renaissance Gardens of the Dubrovnik area, Croatia"(PDF).The Journal of the Garden History Society.24 (2):184–200.doi:10.2307/1587136.JSTOR 1587136. Retrieved19 April 2021.
  22. ^abcClifford, Timothy (2009). "Italy and Dalmatia: Architecture, Sculpture, Painting & the Decorative Arts, c. 1400-1800".Croatia: Aspects of Art, Architecture and Cultural Heritage. London: Frances Lincoln Ltd. p. 120.ISBN 978-0-7112-2921-1.
  23. ^abClifford, Timothy (2009). "Dubrovnik: Italian Art, c. 1400-1800".Croatia: Aspects of Art, Architecture and Cultural Heritage. Frances Lincoln Ltd, London. p. 120.ISBN 978-0-7112-2921-1.
  24. ^Belamarić, Joško (2009). "Nikola Božidarević".Croatia: Aspects of Art, Architecture and Cultural Heritage. Frances Lincoln Ltd, London. p. 108.ISBN 978-0-7112-2921-1.
  25. ^"Nikola Božidarević - Great Painter of the Renaissance in Dubrovnik".Dubrovnik Museums. Retrieved27 April 2021.
  26. ^Keith Shaw; Theresa Shaw (2003).Schiavone, Giorgio (di Tommaso) [Ćulinović, Juraj].doi:10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.T076523.ISBN 978-1-884446-05-4. Retrieved21 April 2021.{{cite book}}:|website= ignored (help)
  27. ^abcdefRadovan Ivančević (ed.)."The Northern Revival: Baroque and Rococo (17th and 18th centuries)".culturenet.hr web portal to Croatian culture. Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia. Retrieved28 March 2021.
  28. ^Katarina Horvat-Levaj; Doris Baričević; Mirjana Repanić-Braun (2011).Akademska crkva sv. Katarine u Zagrebu [The Academic Church of St. Catherine in Zagreb] (in Croatian). Institut za povijest umjetnost (Institute of Art History), Zagreb. p. 403.ISBN 978-953-6106-86-8.
  29. ^abRadovan Ivančević (ed.)."From Classicism to Symbolism (19 century)".culturenet.hr web portal to Croatian culture. Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia. Retrieved4 May 2021.
  30. ^"Croatian Art History: An Overview". Croatian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and European Integrations. Archived fromthe original on 7 October 2011. Retrieved20 June 2010.
  31. ^"Munich Circle". Zagreb: Museum of Contemporary Art. Archived fromthe original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved17 June 2010.
  32. ^"The Early Twentieth Century". Culturenet. Retrieved27 February 2011.
  33. ^abcdDavor Matičević (October 1991)."Identity Despite Discontinuity". International Contemporary Art Network (I-CAN). Retrieved22 June 2010.
  34. ^Subotić, Irina (1990), "Avant-Garde Tendencies in Yugoslavia",Art Journal,49 (1):21–27,doi:10.1080/00043249.1990.10792663,JSTOR 777176
  35. ^Ian Chilvers."The Hlebine School". A Dictionary of Twentieth Century Art. Retrieved22 February 2011.
  36. ^abc"Umjetnost 20. st. u hrvatskoj" [Croatian Art of the 20th Century] (in Croatian). Scribd. Retrieved12 March 2011.
  37. ^ab"Motika, Antun".Croatian Encyclopedia.Archived from the original on 2 February 2021. Retrieved22 January 2021.
  38. ^"Motika, Antun". Istrapedia. Retrieved22 January 2021.
  39. ^"Gorgona Group". Zagreb: Museum of Contemporary Art. Archived fromthe original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved13 March 2011.
  40. ^"New Tendencies". Zagreb: Museum of Contemporary Art. Archived fromthe original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved13 March 2011.
  41. ^"New Art Practice". Zagreb: Museum of Contemporary Art. Archived fromthe original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved13 March 2011.

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