Значение слова "EL GRECO" найдено в 5 источниках

EL GRECO

найдено в "Catholic encyclopedia"
El Greco: translation

El Greco
Spanish artist. Born in Crete, between 1545 and 1550; died at Toledo, 7 April, 1614

Catholic Encyclopedia..2006.

El Greco
    El Greco
     Catholic_Encyclopedia Domenico Theotocopuli (El Greco)
    One of the most remarkable Spanish artists, b. in Crete, between 1545 and 1550; d. at Toledo, 7 April, 1614. On 15 Nov., 1570, the miniature-painter Giulio Clovio wrote to Cardinal N. Farnese, recommending El Greco to his patron, describing him as a Cretan, who was then in Rome and had been a pupil of Titian. El Greco, however, derived very little influence from his master, for his works, beyond a certain influence of Bassano, Baroccio, Veronese, or Tintoretto, are individual and distinct. El Greco came to Spain in 1577. He signed his name in Greek characters, using the Latin form of his Christian name, and repeatedly declaring himself as a native of Crete. He appeared before the tribunal of the Inquisition at Toledo in 1582, as interpreter for one of his compatriots who was accused of being a Moor; he then definitely announced that he had settled in Toledo.Nothing is known of his parentage or early history, nor why he went to Spain; but in time he became typically Spanish, and his paintings exhibit all the characteristics of the people amongst whom he resided. From very early days he struck out a definite line for himself, glorying in cold tones with blue, in the use of grey and many varied tones of white, and in impressionistic work which foreshadowed ideas in art that were introduced one hundred and fifty years later. His first authenticated portrait is that of his patron and fellow-countryman, Clovio, now at Naples; his last, that of a Cardinal, in the National Gallery. His first important commission in Spain was to paint the reredos of the Church of Santo Domingo of Diego at Toledo. He may have been drawn to Spain in connexion with the work in the Escorial, but he made Toledo his home. The house where he lived is now a museum of his works, saved to Spain by one of her nobles.
    His earliest important work is "El Espolio", which adorns the high altar in Toledo, but by far his greatest painting is the famous "Burial of the Count of Orgaz" in the Church of Santo Tomé. The line of portraits in the rear of the burial scene represents with infinite skill almost every phase of the Spanish character, while one or two of the faces in the immediate background have seldom, if ever, been equalled in beauty. It is one of the masterpieces of the world. The influence of El Greco in the world of art was for a long time lost sight of, but it was very real, and very far-reaching. Velasquez owed much to him, and, in modern days, Sargent attributes his skill as an arist to a profound study of El Greco's works. El Greco's separate portraits are marvels of discernment; few men have exhibited the complexities of mental emotion with equal success. The largest collection of his works outside of Spain belongs to the King of Rumania, some of the paintings being at Sinaia, others in Bukarest. In the National Gallery of London, in the collections of Sir John Sterling-Maxwell, the Countess of Yarborough, and Sir Frederick Cook, in the galleries of Dresden, Parma, and Naples, and in the possession of several eminent French collectors are fine examples of his work. But to study El Greco's work to perfection one must visit Toledo, Illescas, Madrid, the Escorial, and many of the private collections of Spain, and his extraordinary work will be found worthy of the closest study. He was a man of eccentric habits and ideas, of tremendous determination, extraordinary reticence, and extreme devoutness. He was a constant attendant at the sacraments, made complete arrangements for his funeral before he died, and was buried in the Church of Santo Tomé.
    COSSIO, Memoir of El Greco (3 vols., Madrid, 1908); BARRES AND LAFOND, Domenico Theotocopuli (Paris, 1911).
    GEORGE CHARLES WILLIAMSON.
    Transcribed by WGKofron With thanks to Fr. John Hilkert, Akron, Ohio

The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII. — New York: Robert Appleton Company..1910.



найдено в "Dictionary of Renaissance art"
El Greco: translation

(Domenikos Theotokopoulos; 1541-1614).
   Born in Candia, Crete, El Greco was trained in the Byzantine tradition. In 1568, he traveled to Venice, which, at the time, ruled Crete. There he discovered the art of Tintoretto and was deeply inspired by it. Two years later he moved to Rome where he entered in the service of the Farnese and began painting in a Venetianized style. His Christ Healing the Blind(c. 1576; New York, Metropolitan Museum) shows the loose Venetian brushwork and deep tones of Tintoretto, elements that would become characteristic of his own style.
   El Greco did not achieve success in Rome, as his works only appealed to a small group of patrons. In 1576, Don Diego de Castilla, dean of the Cathedral of Toledo, invited him to Spain to render works at the Church of Santo Domingo el Antiguo that memorialized Castilla's mistress and their child. It was in Toledo that the artist received the sobriquet El Greco (The Greek). One of the works for Castilla was the Holy Trinity (1577-1579; Madrid, Prado), a painting whose theme and composition were inspired by Albrecht Dürer's work of the same subject (1511; Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum). It shows God the Father as the "throne of mercy," as he is described in the Book of Exodus. He supports the dead body of Christ, who is based on Michelangelo's in the Vatican Pietà. The Santo Domingo commission proved to be a complete success and established El Greco as a master of note.
   In 1580, El Greco received from King Philip II of Spain the commission to paint the Martyrdom of St.Maurice and the Theban Legion for the Monastery of San Lorenzo in El Escorial. Philip paid for the work, but then stored it in the monastery basement and never again commissioned El Greco; perhaps the master's style was too abstract and progressive for its time. This work was followed by his famed Burial of Count Orgáz (1586), painted for the Church of Santo Tomé, Toledo, and St. Martin and the Beggar (1596-1599; Washington, National Gallery) for the city's Chapel of San José. El Greco's View of Toledo (1600; New York, Metropolitan Museum) has a cataclysmic quality that some have read as commentary on the Inquisition carried out in Toledo, then the second major Catholic center in the world and the leader of the Spanish Counter-Reformation. The portrait Cardinal Fernando Niño de Guevara (1605; New York, Metropolitan Museum) shows the head of the Spanish Inquisition seated, wearing glasses, his windswept drapery adding to his threatening demeanor.
   Though considered a Mannerist for his elongation and distortion of forms, some prefer to classify El Greco as Proto-Baroque because his religious paintings addressed the concerns of the Counter-Reformation. Some, like Christ Healing the Blind, speak of the blindness of those who reject Catholicism in favor of Protestantism. Others, such as St. Martin and the Beggar and the Burial of Count Orgáz, stress salvation through charity, a key message imparted by the Church in these years. Among El Greco's pupils, Luis Tristan is the most noted.


найдено в "Historical Dictionary of Renaissance"
El Greco: translation

   Popular nickname of the late Renaissance painter Domenikos Theotokopoulos (ca. 1541-1614), who was born in Crete but moved to Venice. There he assimilated the characteristics of Italian Renaissance painters, especially Titian and Tintoretto. In 1570 he moved to Rome, where he enjoyed the patronage of Cardinal Alessandro Farnese. Loss of this support caused him to move to Spain in 1577, where he received a valuable commission at Toledo but got into trouble when he refused to alter the painting to suit the preferences of the cathedral chapter and had to sue for his fee. Nevertheless, he was one of the artists chosen to paint altarpieces for the royal basilica of El Escorial, for which he produced The Martyrdom of St. Maurice and the Theban Legion. Once again, the work displeased his patron, King Philip II, who disliked the painting on both stylistic and religious grounds. El Greco returned to Toledo and about 1585 established a workshop. An important commission there was The Burial of the Count of Orgaz (1586). El Greco also painted a considerable number of portraits, of which the most striking depicts an important scholar and close friend of the artist, Fray Felix Hortensio Paravicino. El Greco's highly individual style combined the Byzantine tradition with the use of brilliant colors he had learned at Venice and with a unique illusionism that made his paintings transcend natural appearances in order to express spiritual reality.


найдено в "Universal-Lexicon"
El Greco: übersetzung

El Grẹco,
 
spanischer Maler griechischer Herkunft, Greco, El.


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