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| | Mannerism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Mannerism is the term used to describe the artistic style that arose in mid-16th century. |  | | Mannerism developed among the pupils of two masters of the integrated classical moment, with Raphael's assistant Giulio Romano and among the students of Andrea del Sarto, whose studio produced the quintessentially Mannerist painters Pontormo and Rosso Fiorentino, and with whom Vasari apprenticed. |  | | Mannerism is not easily pigeonholed; it scarcely affected the popular arts, and no definitions survived much examination, in the views of English art historians, partly perhaps because they already had sufficient local categories: "Elizabethan drama," "Jacobean architecture and furniture." |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mannerism
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| | The Manner of Mannerism - Art History |
 | | Mannerism is an art style that was dominant in the 16th century and encompassed painting, sculpture and architecture. |  | | The art of Michelangelo and Raphael, premier painters of the Renaissance, are thought to have provided the impetus for the development of Mannerism which was first perhaps reflected around 1520 in the work of Raphael’s pupil, Giulio Romano. |  | | By about 1580, Mannerism began to give way to a more natural and realistic style, that of Baroque, although some fine examples of Mannerism remained in the work of Spanish artist El Greco, such as Baptism of Christ, until around 1590. |
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http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art36083.asp
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| | InLiquid Essays - Photo Mannerism |
 | | Postmodernism has to be seen as being part of a series of mannerisms recurring in the history of art. |  | | "Mannerism, however, though there was no recurrence or direct continuation of it after its end in the seventeenth century, survived as an undercurrent in the history of western art... |  | | Josef Ramaseder's paintings on thermal paper refer in similar manner to the postmodern allegory of art painting itself. |
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http://www.inliquid.com/thought/articles/mangel/mannerism.shtml
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| | glbtq >> arts >> European Art: Mannerism |
 | | Mannerism was most prevalent in Italy, where it was born, and among the most important and influential early Mannerists were the Italian artists Rosso Fiorentino, Jacopo Pontormo, and Parmigianino. |  | | Mannerism was one of the first truly international styles of western art. |  | | Vasari's art school and Giovanni Bologna's creation of "art for art's sake" are both evidence of Mannerism's crucial role in the history of art. |
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http://www.glbtq.com/arts/eur_art3_mannerism.html
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| | WowEssays.com - Issues Of Mannerism |
 | | Issues of Mannerism The movement in painting that is now referred to as Mannerism began in Italy around 1520, influenced artists throughout Europe, and lasted until the end of the 16th century. |  | | The basis of Mannerism then is style; it’s a period of art where the focus was on grace and beauty. |  | | The artists of Mannerism were influenced by all that came before them: antiquity, their predecessors and artistic peers, but Mannerists were most importantly looking toward the future and their own imaginations. |
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http://www.wowessays.com/dbase/aa3/cng168.shtml
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| | Strange Beauty: A Century of Mannerism 1520-1620 |
 | | Despite its importance in the history of art, there is little Mannerist painting in U.S. museums. |  | | An unusual diamond-shaped late painting of Vulcan by another celebrated Mannerist artist, Hendrick Goltzius, once in the collection of Charles I of England, marks the transition between Mannerism and Baroque, combining as it does the conventions of late maniera with some of the innovations of the great seventeenth-century painter, Peter Paul Rubens. |  | | The exhibition includes some 30 paintings and 8 drawings by artists working in the elegant, often strangely extravagant style which prevailed between the Renaissance and Baroque eras in Italy and the Netherlands. |
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http://www.artincontext.org/listings/pages/exhib/6/wszsusn6/press.htm
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| | MANNERISM, Term Papers 2000, Term papers, 051219 |
 | | Through the different masterpieces of art there will be an examination of the artist and how they related to their times in their work. |  | | This essay examines the manner in which Christianity had developed and was developing at around 800 AD. |  | | By discussing the similarities of these works of art a better understanding can be made of these different art periods and their relation to one another. |
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http://www.termpapers2000.com/lib/essay?A=type1&KEYW=mannerism
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| | Columbia Museum of Art: The Collection (Gallery 5: Mannerism) |
 | | Painting became stylized, or "mannered," and the human figure often was depicted with distorted anatomy. |  | | The younger artist was highly influenced by his great predecessor, but the 30-year difference in their ages shows dramatically during the last decades of Tintoretto's life. |  | | The style that followed the High Renaissance in Italy, after the age of Michaelangelo, Leonardo, and Raphael, has since come to be called "Mannerism." Originally a term of some derision, it refers to a style in which the artists searched for a way to advance and refine the work of the High Renaissance. |
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http://www.colmusart.org/html/s03collection05.shtml
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| | Mannerism |
 | | Mannerism requires that its artists create works that enchant, surprise, frighten and unnerve. |  | | An imitative style of their manners, from which came the name of Mannerists, which Mr. |  | | Chastel bestowed on these young painters who worked from 1530 until approximately 1610 and would only be supplanted by the birth of the Baroque period. |
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http://www.bergerfoundation.ch/Jardin/manierisme_english.html
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| | Apollo: Triumphal finery: Mannerism in the art of Italian armour |
 | | The exhibition 'Triumphal finery: Mannerism in the Art of Italian Armour" was at the Musee Rath, Geneva, from 20 May until 20 July 2003. |  | | Apollo: Triumphal finery: Mannerism in the art of Italian armour |  | | The long-term legacy of the exhibition must inevitably be the sumptuous and very substantial catalogue that accompanied it. |
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http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0PAL/is_504_159/ai_n6152488
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| | Mexican Mannerism? |
 | | This was surely an art for the delictation of wealthy connoisseurs. |  | | Its simple, didactic, expository nature, like the blunt piety that inspired it, was, to use a literary metaphor, very "prose"-like as opposed to the convoluted "poetry" of late mannerism. |  | | The Mannerists in Italy were mainly producing a rarefied art for a specific audience of high priests and princes whose interest in the mundane expression of the basics of Christian doctrine and dogma was long since exhausted. |
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http://www.interamericaninstitute.org/mexican_mannerism.htm
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| | Tygo Search - Mannerism |
 | | Mannerism in Italy Below are the works of art reproduced on pages 328-31, 338-39 of APAP, keyed to the plate… |  | | mannerism -- (from maniera, “manner,” or “style”), artistic style that predominated in italy from the en… |  | | High Italian Renaissance Late "Gothic art" of the north Mannerism Giuseppe Arcimboldo To get a larger version, click on the thumbnail version of a picture. |
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http://www.tygo.com/search?s=Mannerism
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| | mannerism - Books, journals, articles @ The Questia Online Library |
 | | Mannerism was the advanced style of Europe in the 1500s...to Correggio. |  | | Mannerism: The Painting and Style of the Late Renaissance |  | | MANNERISM MANNERISM The European style of the sixteenth century by Franzsepp...First Edition 89586-0113 Printed in Austria Contents MANNERISM AS AN INTER-EUROPEAN STYLE 6 - 24 The meaning of the Mannerist style... |
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http://www.questia.com/SM.qst?act=search&keywordsSearchType=1000&keywords=mannerism
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| | MANNERISM |
 | | In Mannerist paintings, compositions can have no focal point, space can be ambiguous, figures can be characterized by an athletic bending and twisting with distortions, exaggerations, an elastic elongation of the limbs, bizarre posturing on one hand, graceful posturing on the other hand, and a rendering of the heads as uniformly small and oval. |  | | While Renaissance artists sought nature to find their style, the Mannerists looked first for a style and found a manner. |  | | Instead of nature as their teacher, Mannerist artists took art. |
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http://www.artmovements.co.uk/mannerism.htm
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| | Mannerism: Artists and their Works |
 | | Mannerism, the artistic style which gained popularity in the period following the High Renaissance, takes as its ideals the work of Raphael and Michelangelo Buonarroti. |  | | Mannerist Art is characterized by a complex composition, with muscular and elongated figures in complex poses. |  | | Discussing Michelangelo in his journal, Eugène Delacroix gives as good a description as any of the limitations of Mannerism: |
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http://www.artcyclopedia.com/history/mannerism.html
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| | Northern Mannerism in the Early Sixteenth Century Special Topics Page Timeline of Art History The Metropolitan ... |
 | | As a movement, this branch of Northern Mannerism was relatively short-lived, dying out by the fourth decade of the 1500s, but it was echoed in some of the trends explored by Netherlandish artists around the turn of the following century. |  | | Inspired by the demand for a recognizable product, or "manner," Antwerp painters developed a repertoire of stock figural motifs, compositions, and themes. |  | | Bolstered by its rich trade and cultural contacts, the port city of Antwerp attracted hundreds of artistsmany of them from northern France, the Rhineland, and especially Hollandwho joined the local painters' Guild of Saint Luke, established large painting and sculpture workshops, and fed an expanding market for the production and export of art. |
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http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/nman/hd_nman.htm
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| | MANNERISM |
 | | In the visual arts the tension, irresolution, imbalance, and the lack of unity and proportion, to which the critics refer, are immediately apparent. |  | | Although this transitional phase has not generally been identified in music, it is evident there as well as in the visual arts. |  | | But Tintoretto places the Master's head above the center of his painting, while the diagonal lines of perspective run by the important figure, which is subordinated by the surrounding crowd, to a vanishing point outside the picture. |
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http://lonestar.texas.net/~mseifert/mannerism.html
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| | Mannerism Art Prints, Pictures - The Thumbnail Images |
 | | Our Mannerism Art prints and posters are unique because it is you, the customer, who determines their uniqueness. |  | | Buy unique Mannerism Art prints and framed pictures at Art Prints on Demand UK |  | | Mannerism Art Prints, Pictures - The Thumbnail Images |
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http://www.artprints-on-demand.co.uk/noframes/mannerism.htm
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| | Mannerism Art - Artists, Artworks and Biographies |
 | | Mannerism was an art style that focused on the human form, depicted in intricate poses and in exaggerated, not always realistic settings. |  | | This art style reflected the tension in Europe at the time of its popularity. |  | | The term Mannerism was derived from the Italian word maniera, translated as “style.” It developed in Florence and Rome between 1520 and 1600, as a style that rejected the balance of the Renaissance period in favor of a more emotional and distorted point of view. |
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http://www.wwar.com/masters/movements/mannerism.html
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| | Mannerism -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | The fulfillment of the literary promise of the early modern period was delayed in part by the Thirty Years' War (161848). |  | | Most of these artists were followers of Michelangelo or Raphael, so that the new period of French architecture partook of Italian Mannerism. |  | | This style is known as Mannerism, and it led to a full-blown style called baroque. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9050578?tocId=9050578
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| | artnet.com: Resource Library: Mannerism |
 | | Although 16th-century artists took the formal vocabulary of the High Renaissance as their point of departure, they used it in ways that were diametrically opposed to the harmonious ideal it originally served. |  | | The term is also applied to a style of painting and drawing practised by artists working in Antwerp slightly earlier, from c. |  | | Mexico, §IV, 1(i): Painting, graphic arts & sculp.: Early colonial, Mannerism and Baroque, 1519c 1730 |
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http://www.artnet.com/library/05/0538/T053829.ASP
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| | The Hutchinson Dictionary of the Arts: Mannerism@ HighBeam Research |
 | | In a general sense some idiosyncrasy, extravagance or affectation of style or manner in art, though it has more specific reference to Italian painting in the 16th century and represents a distinct phase between the art of the High Renaissance and the rise of Baroque. |  | | The Hutchinson Dictionary of the Arts: Mannerism@ HighBeam Research |  | | It was largely based on an admiration for Michelangelo and a consequent exaggeration of the emphasis of his composition and the expressive distortion of his figures. |
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http://www.highbeam.com/library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1P1:28929945&refid=ip_encyclopedia_hf
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| | Amazon.co.uk: The High Renaissance and Mannerism (World of Art S.): Books |
 | | Buy The High Renaissance and Mannerism (World of Art S.) with The Art of the Renaissance (World of Art S.) today! |  | | Amazon.co.uk: The High Renaissance and Mannerism (World of Art S.): Books |  | | Subjects > Art, Architecture & Photography > History of Art & Architecture > By Chronology > Renaissance to Mannerism: 1400-1600 > Bestsellers |
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http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0500201625
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| | Guggenheim Museum - Exhibitions - Robert Mapplethorpe and the Classical Tradition: Photographs and Mannerist Prints |
 | | Deeply rooted in Italian art, Mannerism was an international movement that arose after the death of Raphael in 1520. |  | | Robert Mapplethorpe and the Classical Tradition: Photographs and Mannerist Prints explores the dialogue between the photographs of Robert Mapplethorpe (1946–1989) and classical art, in particular late-16th-century Flemish Mannerist prints, through the engravings and woodcuts of Hendrick Goltzius, Jan Harmensz. |  | | Referred to as the "stylish style," Mannerism is illustrated by emotional and narrative elements that shift away from the balance of harmony articulated by the art of the High Renaissance. |
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http://www.guggenheim.org/exhibitions/mapplethorpe
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| | definition of mannerism |
 | | Adherence to a peculiar style or manner; a characteristic mode of action, bearing, or treatment, carried to excess, especially in literature or art. |  | | Action, Adherence, Art, Bearing, Carried, Characteristic, Especially, Excess, In, Literature, Manner, Mode, Of, Or, Peculiar, Style, To, Treatment |  | | Action, Adherence, Art, Bearing, Carried, Characteristic, Especially, Excess, Literature, Manner, Mode, Peculiar, Style, Treatment |
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http://www.brainydictionary.com/words/ma/mannerism187778.html
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| | MSN Encarta - Search Results - Mannerism |
 | | Italian Painting : Mannerism : pictures of artworks: Poseidon |  | | See all search results in Photos and more (5) |  | | Mannerism, style in art and architecture of the 16th century, characterized by the distortion of elements such as proportion and space. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/SRPage.aspx?search=Mannerism
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| | NGA - Mannerism |
 | | The term mannerism describes the style of the paintings and bronze sculpture on this tour. |  | | Derived from the Italian maniera, meaning simply “style,” mannerism is sometimes defined as the “stylish style” for its emphasis on self-conscious artifice over realistic depiction. |
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http://www.nga.gov/collection/gallery/gg21/gg21-main1.html
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| | artnet.com: Resource Library: Antwerp Mannerism |
 | | Despite its name, Antwerp Mannerism is unrelated to Italian or later Flemish Mannerism; its mannerism, instead, is an expression of Late Gothic art. |  | | There are more than 45,000 articles in The Grove Dictionary of Art. |  | | The outstanding known artist of the group is JAN DE BEER. |
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http://www.artnet.com/library/00/0033/T003370.ASP
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| | Mannerism: Bronzino and his Contemporaries Special Topics Page Timeline of Art History The Metropolitan Museum of Art |
 | | Derived from the Italian maniera, used by sixteenth-century artist and biographer Giorgio Vasari, the term Mannerism refers to the movement in the visual arts that spread through much of Europe between the High Renaissance and |  | | The highly individual styles of these two painters incorporate the elongated figure proportions, twisted poses, and compression of space that distinguish central Italian Mannerism ( |  | | By the mid-sixteenth century, the influence of Mannerism had spread far beyond Florence. |
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http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/zino/hd_zino.htm
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| | ninemsn Encarta - Search Results - Mannerism |
 | | Mannerism, in art, a style that developed chiefly in Rome between about 1530 and 1590. |  | | Throughout the 15th and 16th centuries silversmiths were engaged in producing vast quantities of silver objects intended to display the wealth and... |  | | A self-conscious, somewhat artificial style known as Mannerism arose in Italy about 1520. |
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http://au.encarta.msn.com/Mannerism.html
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| | Biography |
 | | These frescoes, and fresco cycles depicting scenes from the Passion of Christ and the life of St Paul, respectively in the Mattei and Della Valle Chapels in Santa Maria in Aracoeli (1585-90), are still heavily indebted to late sixteenth-century Mannerism. |  | | Paintings with episodes from the life of St Filippo Neri in Santa Maria in Vallicella (1596-99), however, are characterised by a new realism and dramatic contrasts of light and shade. |
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http://www.wga.hu/bio/p/pomaranc/biograph.html
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| | mannerism - definition of mannerism by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia. |
 | | Yet, while his interest had gone to sleep and his energy was consumed in the endless battles he waged, he knew every trick of the light on her hair, every quick denote mannerism of movement, every line of her figure as expounded by her tailor-made gowns. |  | | Mannerism An artistic style of the late 16th century characterized by distortion of elements such as scale and perspective. |  | | He drew up lists of effective and fetching mannerisms, till out of many such, culled from many writers, he was able to induce the general principle of mannerism, and, thus equipped, to cast about for new and original ones of his own, and to weigh and measure and appraise them properly. |
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http://www.thefreedictionary.com/mannerism
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| | Italian Mannerism |
 | | Mannerist: It is derived from the Italian word "maniera", much used in sixteenth century writings on social behavior as well as on the arts, to signify a style or manner in the literal sense but alos the highly prized quality of stylishness which implied ease of manner, virtuosity, fluency, and refinement. |  | | Art historians use the term "Mannerism" as a stylistic label for the art produced from c. |  | | Through an analysis of these two works demonstrate why the work of Raphael should be considered to be a product of the High Renaissance and why the Pontormo a product of Mannerism. |
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http://employees.oneonta.edu/farberas/arth/ARTH110/ARTH110_SL11.html
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| | Spanish art and architecture: The Renaissance and Mannerism |
 | | Italian sculptors working in Spain, such as Jacopo Fiorentino, Domenico Fancelli, and Pietro Torrigiano, did much to popularize Renaissance motifs, which were combined with Gothic and Mudéjar in works of the |  | | Spanish art and architecture: The Renaissance and Mannerism |
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http://www.factmonster.com/ce6/ent/A0861245.html
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| | Mannerism |
 | | Please see my Notice Regarding Copyright and Research before asking about more information about artists or use of the images within my art history section. |  | | Mannerism is a term which is used to describe art which is transitional between the High Renaissance and Baroque periods. |  | | The Renaissance ends around 1550, and the Baroque begins around 1600, so Mannerism takes place in the 50 years intervening. |
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http://www.eyeconart.net/history/Baroque/mannerism.htm
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| | mannerism |
 | | They copied his literary mannerisms but always lacked his ebullience. |  | | Natural courtesy is a world apart from snobbish mannerism. |  | | He has an annoying mannerism of tapping his fingers while he talks. |
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http://www.infoplease.com/dictionary/mannerism
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| | About The Renaissance and Mannerism In Europe Abbeville Press |
 | | Publication of this volume launches a richly illustrated, comprehensive new series devoted to the study of the decorative arts around the world from the late 15th to the early 20th century. |  | | Illustrated with more than eight hundred images, some five hundred in full color, The Renaissance and Mannerism in Europe treats the period from about 1480 to 1630. |  | | About The Renaissance and Mannerism In Europe |
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http://www.abbeville.com/products/Product1558598219.htm
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| | Mannerism |
 | | Mannerism, a time characterized by crisis, gave rise to several competing anti-Classical tendencies rather than one dominant style or ideal. |  | | Social, political and religious upheaval was set against a backdrop of famine, plague and constant war. |  | | Mannerism developed in Rome during confused, troubled times, which witnessed the disintegration of the Catholic Church. |
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http://instruct.westvalley.edu/grisham/1b_mann.html
(84 words)
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| | The Late Renaissance: Mannerism |
 | | Julio (Giulio) Romano began a fashion which several later painters followed. |  | | It was a style more dramatic and exaggerated -- more "mannered"-- than that of his master. |  | | Romano*, at first an assistant to Raphael, developed a style that achieved realism by the use of visual illusion. |
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http://ise.uvic.ca/Library/SLT/literature/highrenaissance.html
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| | Glossary |
 | | A movement in Italian art from about 1520 to 1600. |  | | In Mannerist painting, this was expressed mainly through severe distortions of perspective and scale; complex and crowded compositions; strong, sometimes harsh or discordant colors; and elongated figures in exaggerated poses. |  | | Developing out of the Renaissance, Mannerism rejected Renaissance balance and harmony in favor of emotional intensity and ambiguity. |
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http://www.wga.hu/database/glossary/glossar3.html
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| | Nina and Bolshoi Principals, Charms of Mannerism and Dreams About Japan, Jacobs Pillow, Nelson_Daily Hampshire Gazette, ... |
 | | The program opened with «Charms of Mannerism», choreographed by Ratmansky in 1997 to music by Francois Couperin. |  | | Along with the polished dancing and musical performance, the vibrantly detailed costumes and makeup contributed to an exhilarating experience (one, that, by the way, has won favor with Japanese audiences). |  | | Nina Ananiashvilis appearance at Jacobs Pillow last week with a chamber troupe of Russian dancers and musicians was a coup that ended the 1999 season in grand style. |
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http://www.ananiashvili.com/reviews/charms_dreams/NABPcharmsdreams_jacobspillow082522999_DHG.htm
(561 words)
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| | MSN Encarta - Dictionary - mannerism definition |
 | | Man·ner·ism style of art and architecture: a style of art and architecture, predominant in Italy in the late 16th century, characterized by stylized and elongated forms and vivid colors |  | | Search for "mannerism" in all of MSN Encarta |  | | Click here to search all of MSN Encarta |
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http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/features/dictionary/DictionaryResults.aspx?refid=1861628230
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| | Art and Theory in Baroque Europe: From Mannerism to Baroque |
 | | 1550-1580 (transformation of first phase into a 'manner' - became di maniera) |  | | "...the mannered Mannerism of the second phase, against whose shallowness, even in spiritual matters, the reform which set in around 1580 was directed." |  | | The mechanical attitude engenders conformity or, in other words, "manner". |
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http://witcombe.sbc.edu/baroquetheory/style3.html
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| | logreybeam, it's all just another aspect of mannerism |
 | | Gabriel has previously released material for Team Shadetek’s scarce Shadetek label and, together with longtime collaborator John Xela, has released music under the name Yasume for the City Centre Offices imprint. |  | | This kind of subtlety is rarely achieved, yet Gabriel Morley manages effortlessly. |  | | Such simple yet involving beauty comes around far too infrequently, which is what makes 'It's All Just Another Aspect Of Mannerism' such an essential work. |
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http://www.boomkat.com/item.cfm?id=15056
(491 words)
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| | Mannersism ~ Frumpy & Fabulous |
 | | If there is another Robert Manners out there and his birthday is on December 27 (not that I'm dropping any hints), does that make us the same person? |  | | They don't seem to realize that the Christian holy day of Christmas and the secular gift-giving holiday of Christmas are not even remotely related to each other, and share only the name and the date. |  | | No! Similarly, Santa Claus has absolutely nothing to do with Jesus Christ, nor do either of them even have anything to do with the original Saint Nicholas nor the pagan winter solstice celebrations that were grafted onto the medieval Christian calendar. |
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http://marlene_manners.blogspot.com
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| | Indiachildren - Mannerism and Behaviour |
 | | Children have to be given these explanations because of their curious minds. |  | | So we must not expect our child to be identical and behave in an identical manner as we do. |  | | When we are teaching them manners and behavior, we must always explain to them what are right and wrong and why is it so. |
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http://www.indiachildren.com/growing/3TO6Y/Manner.htm
(859 words)
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