Earlier Works of Titian

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“There is no greater name in Italian art—therefore, no greater in art—than that of Titian,” (Claude Phillips “Earlier Works of Titian”1897 page 5). This artist was more than just a normal painter that played around in his work studio; he was the father of what was bound to become something greater than he even believed. We watched him work with imaginative textures and animated colors to generate the masterpieces of not only the Renaissance; but also of modern day work. All kinds of artists—painters, singers, writers, sculptures—are exploring their muse by studying how he worked with his paint brush; they idolize him and one day want their work to be as exceedingly renowned as Titian’s. His work has been carried on for many years after his death and will persist to stagger humanity for generations to come. Titan was a God to the community for he was so intellectual and meticulous in his work that he translated passion into every stroke of his brush, which left people flabbergasted with each of his innovative pieces of work.
Seen by many as an astonishing, world-known painter, Titian, Tiziano Vecellio, was known for his stand-alone approach to constructing pieces that implicated techniques that of which no other artist could wrap their brains’ around. Born in 1485, Titian gave the impression of being like any other typical baby, but by 1506, at age twenty-one, he distorted how the world interpreted him and went from an adolescent nobody to a dream that every person can only hope to achieve. “[His] method is judicious, beautiful and astonishing for it makes pictures appear alive and painted with great art, but it conceals the labor that has gone into them”(Giorgio Vasarioin,1987, “Titian of Cadore” in Lives of the Artists, pg. 458)...

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...nd concentrated color can be used to give work more effortlessness, but at the same time, demonstrate an ample amount of detail. Titian lives on far past his ninety- one years and still somehow seems to remain animated and original even to this society of pixilated technology that so many people have formed reliance on. In his years of living in the Renaissance time period, Titian completed over 600 painting—most famous being Three Ages of Man (1512), Bacchus and Ariadne (1523), and Venus of Urbino (1538)—so many would say that his life has been very industrious and triumphant; if not triumphant, than at least unforgettable.

Works Cited

Phillips, Claude. The Earlier Works of Titian. London: Seeley, 1897. 5. Print.

Vasarioin, Giorgio. Titian of Cadore in “Lives of the Artists”.458. Print

Taine, Hippolyte. Italy-Rome and Naples. Florence and Vince. 1871. Print.

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