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Transformative Gestures: Paintings of the Renaissance

Museum of Art Museum of Art

Exhibition: Transformative Gestures: Paintings of the Renaissance

Dates:

Location:

Becker Gallery
European paintings of the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries tell stories of love, transgression, sacrifice, and redemption that are often based on biblical or mythological narratives, and on the legends of the Christian saints. While the paintings are silent, they speak to the viewer through their figures' expressive hand movements. It is within the power of those gestures to transform a man into a god, a sinner into a believer, a nymph into a bay laurel tree.

Selected Works

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European paintings of the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries tell stories of love, transgression, sacrifice, and redemption that are often based on biblical or mythological narratives, and on the legends of the Christian saints. While the paintings are silent, they speak to the viewer through their figures' expressive hand movements. It is within the power of those gestures to transform a man into a god, a sinner into a believer, a nymph into a bay laurel tree.

Since antiquity, the meaning of many gestures was strictly defined. Renaissance painters, like actors and orators, could draw on a long tradition of Chironomia, the artful use of gesticulation. This selection of paintings from the º¬Ðß²ÝÑо¿ÊÒ collection invites viewers to explore the effective use of hands from the days of Giotto to Pontormo and Calvaert