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Baroque

hanngill 2008. 4. 29. 13:04

Baroque

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Adoration, by Peter Paul Rubens. Dynamic figures spiral down around a void: draperies blow: a whirl of movement lit in a shaft of light, rendered in a free bravura handling of paint.
Adoration, by Peter Paul Rubens. Dynamic figures spiral down around a void: draperies blow: a whirl of movement lit in a shaft of light, rendered in a free bravura handling of paint.
The Church of Sant'Andrea al Quirinale, designed by Gian Lorenzo Bernini, is a very good example of Baroque architecture with its domed roof and curved contours, and is also a fine example of Baroque painting with the shown altar, which portrays a very dramatized painting of Saint Andrew being crucified.
The Church of Sant'Andrea al Quirinale, designed by Gian Lorenzo Bernini, is a very good example of Baroque architecture with its domed roof and curved contours, and is also a fine example of Baroque painting with the shown altar, which portrays a very dramatized painting of Saint Andrew being crucified.

In the arts, the Baroque was a Western cultural epoch, commencing roughly at the turn of the 17th century in Rome, that was exemplified by drama, tension, exuberance, and grandeur in sculpture, painting, literature, dance, and music.[citation needed]. In music, the term 'Baroque' applies to the final period of dominance of imitative counterpoint, where different voices and instruments echo each other but at different pitches, sometimes inverting the echo, and even reversing thematic material.[citation needed]

The popularity and success of the Baroque style was encouraged by the Roman Catholic Church which had decided at the time of the Council of Trent that the arts should communicate religious themes in direct and emotional involvement.[citation needed] The aristocracy also saw the dramatic style of Baroque architecture and art as a means of impressing visitors and expressing triumphant power and control. Baroque palaces are built around an entrance sequence of courts, anterooms, grand staircases, and reception rooms of sequentially increasing magnificence. In similar profusions of detail, art, music, architecture, and literature inspired each other in the Baroque cultural movement[citation needed] as artists explored what they could create from repeated and varied patterns. Some traits and aspects of Baroque paintings that differentiate this style from others are the abundant amount of details, often bright polychromy, less realistic faces of subjects, and an overall sense of awe, which was one of the goals in Baroque art.

The word baroque probably derives from the ancient Portuguese noun "barroco"[citation needed] which is a pearl that is not round but of unpredictable and elaborate shape. Hence, in informal usage, the word baroque can simply mean that something is "elaborate", with many details, without reference to the Baroque styles of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

[edit] Evolution of the Baroque

Beginning around the year 1600, the demands for new art resulted in what is now known as the Baroque. The canon promulgated at the Council of Trent (1545–63) by which the Roman Catholic Church addressed the representational arts by demanding that paintings and sculptures in church contexts should speak to the illiterate rather than to the well-informed, is customarily offered as an inspiration of the Baroque, which appeared, however, a generation later. This turn toward a populist conception of the function of ecclesiastical art is seen by many art historians as driving the innovations of Caravaggio and the Carracci brothers, all of whom were working in Rome at that time.

Aeneas flees burning Troy, Federico Barocci, 1598: a moment caught in a dramatic action from a classical source, bursting from the picture plane in a sweeping diagonal perspective.
Aeneas flees burning Troy, Federico Barocci, 1598: a moment caught in a dramatic action from a classical source, bursting from the picture plane in a sweeping diagonal perspective.

The appeal of Baroque style turned consciously from the witty, intellectual qualities of 16th century Mannerist art to a visceral appeal aimed at the senses. It employed an iconography that was direct, simple, obvious, and dramatic. Baroque art drew on certain broad and heroic tendencies in Annibale Carracci and his circle, and found inspiration in other artists such as Correggio, Caravaggio, and Federico Barocci nowadays sometimes termed 'proto-Baroque'.

Germinal ideas of the Baroque can also be found in the work of Michelangelo.

Some general parallels in music make the expression "Baroque music" useful. Contrasting phrase lengths, harmony and counterpoint ousted polyphony, and orchestral color made a stronger appearance. (See Baroque music.) Similar fascination with simple, strong, dramatic expression in poetry, where clear, broad syncopated rhythms replaced the enknotted elaborated metaphysical similes employed by Mannerists such as John Donne and imagery that was strongly influenced by visual developments in painting, can be sensed in John Milton's Paradise Lost, a Baroque epic.

Though Baroque was superseded in many centres by the Rococo style, beginning in France in the late 1720s, especially for interiors, paintings and the decorative arts, Baroque architecture remained a viable style until the advent of Neoclassicism in the later 18th century. A prominent example, the Neapolitan palace of Caserta, a Baroque palace (though in a chaste exterior) that was not even begun until 1752. Critics have given up talking about a "Baroque period."

In paintings, Baroque gestures are broader than Mannerist gestures: less ambiguous, less arcane and mysterious, more like the stage gestures of opera, a major Baroque artform. Baroque poses depend on contrapposto ("counterpoise"), the tension within the figures that moves the planes of shoulders and hips in counterdirections. It made the sculptures almost seem like they were about to move. See Bernini's David (below, left).

The dryer, chastened, less dramatic and coloristic, later stages of 18th century Baroque architectural style are often seen as a separate Late Baroque manifestation. (See Claude Perrault.) Academic characteristics in the neo-Palladian architectural style, epitomized by William Kent, are a parallel development in Britain and the British colonies: within doors, Kent's furniture designs are vividly influenced by the Baroque furniture of Rome and Genoa, hieratic tectonic sculptural elements meant never to be moved from their positions completing the wall elevation. Baroque is a style of unity imposed upon rich and massy detail.

The Baroque was defined by Heinrich Wölfflin as the age where the oval replaced the circle as the center of composition, centralization replaced balance, and coluoristic and "painterly" effects began to become more prominent. Art historians, often Protestant ones, have traditionally emphasized that the Baroque style evolved during a time in which the Roman Catholic Church had to react against the many revolutionary cultural movements that produced a new science and new forms of religion—the Reformation. It has been said that the monumental Baroque is a style that could give the Papacy, like secular absolute monarchies, a formal, imposing way of expression that could restore its prestige, at the point of becoming somehow symbolic of the Catholic Reformation. Whether this is the case or not, it was successfully developed in Rome, where Baroque architecture widely renewed the central areas with perhaps the most important urbanistic revision during this period of time.

[edit] Baroque visual art

Still-life, by Portuguese painter Josefa de Óbidos, c.1679, Santarém, Portugal, Municipal Library
Still-life, by Portuguese painter Josefa de Óbidos, c.1679, Santarém, Portugal, Municipal Library
Main article: Baroque art

A defining statement of what Baroque signifies in painting is provided by the series of paintings executed by Peter Paul Rubens for Marie de Medici at the Luxembourg Palace in Paris (now at the Louvre) [1], in which a Catholic painter satisfied a Catholic patron: Baroque-era conceptions of monarchy, iconography, handling of paint, and compositions as well as the depiction of space and movement.

There were highly diverse strands of Italian baroque painting, from Caravaggio to Cortona; both approaching emotive dynamism with different styles. Another frequently cited work of Baroque art is Bernini's Saint Theresa in Ecstasy for the Cornaro chapel in Saint Maria della Vittoria, which brings together architecture, sculpture, and theater into one grand conceit [2].

The later Baroque style gradually gave way to a more decorative Rococo, which, through contrast, further defines Baroque.

The intensity and immediacy of baroque art and its individualism and detail—observed in such things as the convincing rendering of cloth and skin textures—make it one of the most compelling periods of Western art.

[edit] Baroque sculpture

In Baroque sculpture, groups of figures assumed new importance, and there was a dynamic movement and energy of human forms— they spiralled around an empty central vortex, or reached outwards into the surrounding space. For the first time, Baroque sculpture often had multiple ideal viewing angles. The characteristic Baroque sculpture added extra-sculptural elements, for example, concealed lighting, or water fountains. Aleijadinho in Brazil was also one of the great names of baroque sculpture, and his master work is the set of statues of the Santuário de Bom Jesus de Matosinhos in Congonhas. The soapstone sculptures of old testament prophets around the terrace are considered amongst his finest work.

The architecture, sculpture and fountains of Bernini (1598–1680) give highly charged characteristics of Baroque style. Bernini was undoubtedly the most important sculptor of the Baroque period. He approached Michelangelo in his omnicompetence: Bernini sculpted, worked as an architect, painted, wrote plays, and staged spectacles. In the late 20th century Bernini was most valued for his sculpture, both for his virtuosity in carving marble and his ability to create figures that combine the physical and the spiritual. He was also a fine sculptor of bust portraits in high demand among the powerful.

[edit] Bernini's Cornaro chapel: the complete work of art

A good example of Bernini's work that helps us understand the Baroque is his St. Theresa in Ecstasy (1645–52), created for the Cornaro Chapel of the church of Santa Maria della Vittoria, Rome. Bernini designed the entire chapel, a subsidiary space along the side of the church, for the Cornaro family.

He had, in essence, a brick box shaped something like a proscenium stage space with which to work. Saint Theresa, the focal point of the chapel, is a monochromatic marble statue (a soft white) surrounded by a polychromatic marble architectural framing concealing a window to light the statue from above. In shallow relief, sculpted figure-groups of the Cornaro family inhabit in opera boxes along the two side walls of the chapel. The setting places the viewer as a spectator in front of the statue with the Cornaro family leaning out of their box seats and craning forward to see the mystical ecstasy of the saint. St. Theresa is highly idealized in detail and in an imaginary setting. St. Theresa of Avila, a popular saint of the Catholic Reformation, wrote narratives of her mystical experiences aimed at the nuns of her Carmelite Order; these writings had become popular reading among lay people interested in pursuing spirituality. She once described the love of God as piercing her heart like a burning arrow. Bernini literalizes this image by placing St. Theresa on a cloud in a reclining pose; what can only be described as a Cupid figure holds a golden arrow (the arrow is made of metal) and smiles down at her. The angelic figure is not preparing to plunge the arrow into her heart— rather, he has withdrawn it. St. Theresa's face reflects not the anticipation of ecstasy, but her current fulfilment.

The blending of religious and erotic was intensely offensive to both neoclassical restraint and, later, to Victorian prudishness; it is part of the genius of the Baroque. Bernini, who in life and writing was a devout Catholic, is not attempting to satirize the experience of a chaste nun, but to embody in marble a complex truth about religious experience— that it is an experience that takes place in the body. Theresa described her bodily reaction to spiritual enlightenment in a language of ecstasy used by many mystics, and Bernini's depiction is earnest.

The Cornaro family promotes itself discreetly in this chapel; they are represented visually, but are placed on the sides of the chapel, witnessing the event from balconies. As in an opera house, the Cornaro have a privileged position in respect to the viewer, in their private reserve, closer to the saint; the viewer, however, has a better view from the front. They attach their name to the chapel, but St. Theresa is the focus. It is a private chapel in the sense that no one could say mass on the altar beneath the statue (in 17th century and probably through the 19th) without permission from the family, but the only thing that divides the viewer from the image is the altar rail. The spectacle functions both as a demonstration of mysticism and as a piece of family pride.

[edit] Baroque architecture

Castle of Trier (Germany)
Castle of Trier (Germany)
Ludwigsburg Palace near Stuttgart, Germany's largest Baroque Palace
Ludwigsburg Palace near Stuttgart, Germany's largest Baroque Palace
Melk Abbey, in Austria near the Wachau valley (architect Jakob Prandtauer)
Melk Abbey, in Austria near the Wachau valley (architect Jakob Prandtauer)
Main article: Baroque architecture

In Baroque architecture, new emphasis was placed on bold massing, colonnades, domes, light-and-shade (chiaroscuro), 'painterly' colour effects, and the bold play of volume and void. In interiors, Baroque movement around and through a void informed monumental staircases that had no parallel in previous architecture. The other Baroque innovation in worldly interiors was the state apartment, a processional sequence of increasingly rich interiors that culminated in a presence chamber or throne room or a state bedroom. The sequence of monumental stairs followed by a state apartment was copied in smaller scale everywhere in aristocratic dwellings of any pretensions.

Baroque architecture was taken up with enthusiasm in central Germany (see e.g. Ludwigsburg Palace and Zwinger Dresden), Austria and Russia (see e.g. Peterhof and Catherine Palace). In England the culmination of Baroque architecture was embodied in work by Sir Christopher Wren, Sir John Vanbrugh and Nicholas Hawksmoor, from ca. 1660 to ca. 1725. Many examples of Baroque architecture and town planning are found in other European towns, and in Latin America. Town planning of this period featured radiating avenues intersecting in squares, which took cues from Baroque garden plans.In Sicily, Baroque developed new shapes and themes as in Noto and Acireale "Basilica di San Sebastiano"

[edit] Baroque theatre

In theatre, the elaborate conceits, multiplicity of plot turns, and variety of situations characteristic of Mannerism (Shakespeare's tragedies, for instance) were superseded by opera, which drew together all the arts into a unified whole.

theatre evolved in the Baroque era and became a multimedia experience, starting with the actual architectural space. In fact, much of the technology used in current Broadway or commercial plays was invented and developed during this era. The stage could change from a romantic garden to the interior of a palace in a matter of seconds. The entire space became a framed selected area that only allows the users to see a specific action, hiding all the machinery and technology - mostly ropes and pulleys.

This technology affected the content of the narrated or performed pieces, practising at its best the Deus ex Machina solution. Gods were finally able to come down - literally - from the heavens and rescue the hero in the most extreme and dangerous, even absurd situations.

The term Theatrum Mundi - the world is a stage - was also created. The social and political realm in the real world is manipulated in exactly the same way the actor and the machines are presenting/limiting what is being presented on stage, hiding selectively all the machinery that makes the actions happen. There is a wonderful German documentary called Theatrum Mundi that clearly portrays the political extents of the Baroque and its main representative, Louis XIV.

Watch films like Vatel, Farinelli, and the wonderful staging of Monteverdi's Orpheus at the Gran Teatro del Liceu in Barcelona to see some wonderful recreations of this time period. William Christie, American, and Les Arts Florissants have performed extensive research on all the French Baroque Opera, performing pieces from Charpentier and Lully, among others that are extremely faithful to the original 17th century creations.

[edit] Baroque literature and philosophy

Baroque actually expressed new values, which often are summarized in the use of metaphor and allegory, widely found in Baroque literature, and in the research for the "maraviglia" (wonder, astonishment — as in Marinism), the use of artifices. If Mannerism was a first breach with Renaissance, Baroque was an opposed language.[citation needed] The psychological pain of Man -- a theme disbanded after the Copernican and the Lutheran revolutions in search of solid anchors, a proof of an "ultimate human power" -- was to be found in both the art and architecture of the Baroque period. A relevant part of works was made on religious themes, since the Roman Church was the main "customer."[citation needed]

Virtuosity was researched by artists (and the virtuoso became a common figure in any art) together with realism and care for details (some talk of a typical "intricacy").

The privilege given to external forms had to compensate and balance the lack of content that has been observed in many Baroque works: Marino's "Maraviglia", for example, is practically made of the pure, mere form. Fantasy and imagination should be evoked in the spectator, in the reader, in the listener. All was focused around the individual Man, as a straight relationship between the artist, or directly the art and its user, its client. Art is then less distant from user, more directly approaching him, solving the cultural gap that used to keep art and user reciprocally far, by Maraviglia. But the increased attention to the individual, also created in these schemes some important genres like the Romanzo (novel) and allowed popular or local forms of art, especially dialectal literature, to be put into evidence. In Italy this movement toward the single individual (that some define a "cultural descent", while others indicate it as a possible cause for the classical opposition to Baroque) caused Latin to be definitely replaced by Italian.

In Spain, the baroque writers are framed in the Siglo de Oro. Naturalism and sharply critical points of view on Spanish society are common among such conceptista writers as Quevedo, while culterano authors emphasize the importance of form with complicated images and the use of hyperbaton. In Catalonia the baroque took hold as well in Catalan language, with representatives including poets and dramaturgs such as Francesc Fontanella and Francesc Vicenç Garcia as well as the unique emblem book Atheneo de Grandesa by Josep Romaguera. In Colonial Spanish America two of the best-known baroque writers were Sor Juana and Bernardo de Balbuena.

In the Portuguese Empire the most famous baroque writer of the time was Father António Vieira, a Jesuit who lived in Brazil during the 18th century. Secondary writers are Gregório de Matos and Francisco Rodrigues Lobo.

In English literature, the metaphysical poets represent a closely related movement; their poetry likewise sought unusual metaphors, which they then examined in often extensive detail. Their verse also manifests a taste for paradox, and deliberately inventive and unusual turns of phrase.

For German Baroque literature, see German literature of the Baroque period.

[edit] Baroque music

Main article: Baroque music

The term Baroque is also used to designate the style of music composed during a period that overlaps with that of Baroque art, but usually encompasses a slightly later period. J.S. Bach and G.F. Handel are often considered its culminating figures.

It is a still-debated question as to what extent Baroque music shares aesthetic principles with the visual and literary arts of the Baroque period. A fairly clear, shared element is a love of ornamentation, and it is perhaps significant that the role of ornament was greatly diminished in both music and architecture as the Baroque gave way to the Classical period.

It should be noted that the application of the term "Baroque" to music is a relatively recent development. The first use of the word "Baroque" in music was only in 1919, by Curt Sachs, and it was not until 1940 that it was first used in English (in an article published by Manfred Bukofzer). Even as late as 1960 there was still considerable dispute in academic circles over whether music as diverse as that by Jacopo Peri, François Couperin and J.S. Bach could be meaningfully bundled together under a single stylistic term.

Many musical forms were born in that era, like the concerto and sinfonia. Forms such as the sonata, cantata and oratorio flourished. Also, opera was born out of the experimentation of the Florentine Camerata, the creators of monody, who attempted to recreate the theatrical arts of the ancient Greeks. Indeed, it is exactly that development which is often used to denote the beginning of the musical Baroque, around 1600. An important technique used in baroque music was the use of ground bass, a repeated bass line, which appears within GCSE Music examinations.

[edit] Baroque composers and examples

[edit] Etymology

The word "Baroque", like most periodic or stylistic designations, was invented by later critics rather than practitioners of the arts in the 17th and early 18th centuries. It is a French transliteration of the Portuguese phrase "pérola barroca", which means "irregular pearl"—an ancient similar word, "Barlocco" or "Brillocco", is used in the Roman dialect for the same meaning[citation needed]—and natural pearls that deviate from the usual, regular forms so they do not have an axis of rotation are known as "baroque pearls". The word may have been influenced by the mnemonic term "Baroco" denoting, in logical Scholastica, a supposedly laboured form of syllogism.[citation needed]

The term "Baroque" was initially used with a derogatory meaning, to underline the excesses of its emphasis, of its eccentric redundancy, its noisy abundance of details, as opposed to the clearer and sober rationality of the Renaissance. It was first rehabilitated by the Swiss-born art historian, Heinrich Wölfflin (1864–1945) in his Renaissance und Barock (1888); Wölfflin identified the Baroque as "movement imported into mass," an art antithetic to Renaissance art. He did not make the distinctions between Mannerism and Baroque that modern writers do, and he ignored the later phase, the academic Baroque that lasted into the 18th century. Writers in French and English did not begin to treat Baroque as a respectable study until Wölfflin's influence had made German scholarship pre-eminent.

[edit] Modern usage

In modern usage, the term "Baroque" may still be used, usually pejoratively, to describe works of art, craft, or design that are thought to have excessive ornamentation or complexity of line, or, as a synonym for "Byzantine", to describe literature, computer programs, contracts, or laws that are thought to be excessively complex, indirect, or obscure in language, to the extent of concealing or confusing their meaning. A "Baroque fear" is deeply felt, but utterly beyond daily reality.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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16세기말경 이탈리아에서 뚜렷하게 나타나기 시작했으나 유럽에서는 대략 17세기, 독일과 남아메리카의 식민지에서는 18세기에 이르러서야 절정에 이르렀다. 바로크 시대 작품의 특징은 양식적인 면에서 혼합적이며 심지어 반항적인 모습을 보인다는 것이다. 그러나 감각에 호소하여 감정적 상태를 표출하려는 욕구는 일반적으로 극적 표현으로 나타난다. 바로크 양식과 관련된 몇 가지 특징들은 장려함, 감각적인 풍요, 극적 효과, 생동감, 운동감, 긴장, 감정분출, 예술간의 특징들을 흐리는 경향 등이다.
바로크라는 용어는 이탈리아어인 'Baroco'에서 유래한 듯하다. 이 용어는 중세 철학자들이 구조논리학에서 장애물을 묘사하는 데 쓰였다. 이후 이 말은 '왜곡된 생각이나 사고의 복잡한 과정'이라는 의미를 가지게 되었다. 또다른 유래는 포르투갈어인 'barroco'(스페인어로 barrueco)에서이다. 이 용어는 불규칙적이고 불완전한 모양의 진주를 의미하는데 '바로크 진주'라는 보석상들의 용어로 오늘날까지 남아 있다. 미술비평에 있어서 바로크는 불규칙적이고 화려한 것을 뜻하거나 정형화된 규칙이나 비례로부터 벗어난 것들을 지칭한다. 바로크에 대한 이러한 부정적인 시각은 17세기 신고전주의적 관점에 기인하는 것으로 요한 빙켈만부터 존 러스킨, 야코프 부르크하르트를 거치면서 약간의 수정이 이루어졌다. 19세기 후반까지 바로크라는 용어는 비정상, 기괴함, 과장, 과도한 장식 등의 의미를 가졌다. 하인리히 뵐플린의 선구적 연구 〈르네상스와 바로크 Renaissance und Barock〉(1888)에 이르러서야 은근한 경멸적 의미가 아닌 하나의 양식을 지칭하는 이름으로 사용되었고, 바로크 양식의 특징들에 대한 체계적인 정리가 이루어졌다.
바로크 시대의 예술작품들이 그러한 다양성을 보이기 때문에 그 작품들의 공통된 특징들은 당시의 광범위한 문화적·지적 풍토와의 관계 속에서 찾아야 하는데, 그중 3가지가 바로크 미술에 영향을 준 중요한 요인이다. 첫째, 반종교개혁의 출현과 그 영토적·지적 지배영역의 확장이다. 16세기 말엽에 이르러 매너리즘이라는 세련되고 품격있는 양식이 유력한 표현수단이 되지 못했으며 예술가 그룹에서 마니에리스모가 종교예술로는 부족하다는 인식이 팽배해졌다. 로마 가톨릭 교회는 종교개혁의 침입에 대항하기 위해 트리엔트 종교회의(1545~63)에 따라 미술이 교회에서 대중들의 신앙을 격려하고 확장하는 수단으로 기여해야 한다는 포교원칙을 채택했다. 이러한 목적을 달성하기 위해 교회는 예술작품이 감동적이면서도 신도들에게 감각적으로 분명히 호소해야 한다는 의식적인 예술 계획안을 채택했다. 이 계획안에서 발전된 바로크 양식은 역설적이게도 감각적이면서 정신적이다. 즉 사실적인 표현방법은 표현이 평범한 신도에게 보다 이해하기 쉬운 종교적인 영상을 제공했으며 극적이면서도 환영적인 효과는 신도들을 경건하고 헌신적인 태도를 갖게 했고 하느님의 영광에 대한 인상을 심어주었다. 그래서 바로크식 교회의 천장화들은 무한성을 생생하게 나타내어 보는 사람들로 하여금 천상의 것을 느끼게 해주었다. 둘째, 세력 있는 중산층의 등장과 함께 절대왕정의 강화를 들 수 있다. 이들은 곧 예술의 주요한 후원자가 되었다. 바로크 궁전들은 중앙집권국가의 권력과 장대함을 과시하기 위해 거대하고 넓은 규모로 세워졌다. 베르사유 궁과 그 정원이 가장 좋은 예가 될 것이다. 동시에 중산층의 미술시장이 발달했는데 프랑스의 르 냉 형제와 조르주 드 라 투르, 그리고 17세기 네덜란드 회화의 다양한 유파들의 작품에서 그들의 사실주의 취향을 엿볼 수 있다(→ 베르사유 궁전). 셋째, 과학의 발달과 세계탐험에 의해 자극된 자연에 대한 새로운 관심과 지적 지평의 확대이다. 이러한 사실들은 사람들에게 자신의 미천함, 특히 코페르니쿠스의 발견으로 지구가 우주의 중심이 아님을 알게 되자 자연세계의 복잡성과 무한성이라는 2가지 새로운 의미를 동시에 부여했다. 넓은 자연의 배경에 인간이 조그마한 모습으로 묘사되었던 17세기 풍경화의 발달은 이러한 인간조건에 대한 인식전환을 보여준다(→ 코페르니쿠스 체계).
바로크 시대의 예술작품들은 기묘한 다양성을 보여준다. 이것은 주로 자연주의와 고전주의가 전형적인 바로크 양식과 공존하면서 혼합되었기 때문이다. 실상 1690년대의 마니에리스모를 결정적으로 종결짓고 바로크 양식을 선도했던 안니발레 카라치와 카라바조 같은 이탈리아의 화가들은 각각 고전주의와 자연주의적 양식으로 그림을 그렸다. 엄밀한 의미에서 바로크 회화는 1620년대 로마에서 시작되어 피에트로 다 코르토나, 구이도 레니, 일 구에르치노, 도메니키노를 비롯한 수많은 미술가들의 천장화와 교회장식에서 절정에 이르렀다. 가장 유명한 바로크의 조각가이자 건축가인 잔 로렌초 베르니니는 로마에 있는 성베드로 대성당의 제단에 나선형 기둥이 있는 감실과 정면의 거대한 열주를 설계했다. 카를로 마데르노, 프란체스코 보로미니, 구아리노 구아리니 등에 의해 발전된 바로크 건축은 거대함, 기념비적 성격, 움직임, 극적인 공간과 조명의 연속성, 대조적인 표면효과를 이용한 풍부한 실내장식, 생생한 색채, 건축구조의 즉물성을 높이고 관능적인 유희를 자극하는 화려한 소재 등을 강조했다. 이렇게 전개된 고전주의 경향은 프랑스에서 바로크의 추진력을 완화시키는 역할을 하게 되었는데, 이는 진지하고 논리적이고 질서정연한 그림을 그린 니콜라 푸셍과, 더 화려한 작품을 그린 샤를 르 브룅, 초상화가 히아생트 리고, 니콜라 드 라르질리에르의 작품을 통해 알 수 있다. 프랑스 건축에서는 섬세함·우아함·신중함 등의 바로크적 특징이 점점 희미해져 갔다. 그러나 로마 가톨릭 성향이 확고한 스페인에서는 특히 건축에서 바로크 양식이 활발하게 펼쳐졌다. 스페인 최고의 건축가 호세 베니토 추리게라의 건축물은 표면 텍스처와 화려한 세부묘사에 대한 스페인 특유의 관심을 보여준다. 그는 추리게레스크(Churrigueresque)라는 이름이 붙여진 건축양식으로 많은 추종자를 매혹시켰고 그의 스타일이 받아들여졌으며 이 양식은 아메리카의 스페인 식민지 등 여러 지역으로 퍼져나갔다. 디에고 벨라스케스를 비롯한 17세기 스페인의 화가들은 어두운 색조로 매우 사실적인 표현을 추구했는데 이는 정통적인 바로크 화풍에서는 약간 동떨어진 것이었다.
바로크 미술은 북유럽, 특히 지금의 벨기에에서만 일부에 국한되어 펼쳐졌다. 당시 스페인령으로서 가톨릭의 영향이 두드러졌던 이 지역에서 최고의 장인은 페테르 파울 루벤스인데 그의 작품에 나타난 날카로운 대각선 구성과 넓고 기운찬 형상들은 전형적인 바로크 화풍을 보이고 있다. 안토니 반 데이크의 우아한 초상화와 야코프 요르단스의 힘찬 인물표현 역시 그 좋은 예이다. 네덜란드의 예술은 사실주의적인 경향을 보여주는데 이는 중산층 계급 후원자들의 취향에 의한 것이었으며, 수없이 다양한 양식과 렘브란트나 프란스 할스 같은 시골 풍경화가들의 그림은 중요한 점에서 바로크 양식의 독자성을 보여주고 있다. 바로크는 영국에서도 주목할 만한 영향을 남겼는데 교회·궁전의 디자인, 특히 크리스토퍼 렌 경과 존 밴브루 경의 작품이 대표적이다. 바로크의 마지막 꽃핌은 남독일 로마 가톨릭 지역과 오스트리아에서였는데 이곳의 건축가들은 1720년대 이탈리아 건축의 모델로부터 과감히 떨어져나왔다. 대표적인 사람들은 교회·수도원·궁정의 장식을 디자인한 J. B. 피셔 폰 에를라흐, J. L. 폰 힐데브란트, 아잠 형제, 발타자어 노이만, 도미니쿠스 치머만이다. 이들의 디자인은 미묘한 효과를 만드는 채색 표면과 지극히 화려하면서도 섬세한 스투코 장식을 잘 조화시킨 것이다.
음악사에서 가장 극적인 전환점 중 하나가 17세기초에 일어났는데 이번에도 역시 이탈리아가 그 선봉에 섰다. 종교음악에서는 16세기의 보편적인 다성음악 양식인 스틸레 안티코(stile antico:옛 양식)가 계속 유지되었던 반면, 독창 성부를 강조하고 베이스 성부의 양극화 현상이 두드러지며 표현적인 화성에 대한 관심이 그 특징인 스틸레 모데르노(stile moderno:새 양식)가 싹트기 시작했다. 이 음악어법의 확장으로 성악과 기악의 차이뿐만 아니라 종교음악과 세속음악의 차이가 뚜렷해졌으며 국가간의 차이도 현저하게 드러났다. 다른 장르의 예술과 마찬가지로 바로크 시대 음악은 그 양식의 다양성이 특징이다. 오페라·오라토리오·칸타타가 새로 등장한 가장 중요한 성악양식인 반면, 소나타·협주곡·서곡 등 중요한 새 기악양식들이 생겼다. 최초의 '새 음악'의 대작곡가는 클라우디오 몬테베르디(1567~1643)인데 이탈리아의 알레산드로 스카를라티(1660~1725)와 조반니 페르골레시(1710~25)가 그 뒤를 계승했다. 이탈리아에서 바로크 기악음악의 전통은 아르칸젤로 코렐리(1653~1713), 안토니오 비발디(1678~1741), 주세페 타르티니(1692~1770)의 작품에서 발견된다. 프랑스에서 바로크 음악의 대가는 대표적인 오페라 작곡가인 장바티스트 륄리와 장 필리프 라모이다. 영국에서는 스튜어트 왕가 가면극의 총체적인 극적 경험이, 독일 태생이며 이탈리아에서 교육받은 게오르크 프리드리히 헨델이 성악음악에서 괄목할 만한 성과를 거둠으로써 계승되었으며, 독일에서는 요한 제바스티안 바흐가 종교음악에서 두드러졌다. 그밖의 주목할 만한 독일의 바로크 작곡가로는 하인리히 쉬츠(1585~1672), 디트리히 북스테후데(1673~1707), 게오르크 필리프 텔레만(1681~1767)이 있다.
문학에서 구체적으로 보이는 바로크적 특징은 이탈리아의 잠바티스타 마리노, 스페인의 루이스 데 공고라, 독일의 마르틴 오피츠의 작품에서 나타난다. 주로 존 던의 작품에서 두드러지는 영국의 형이상학파 시는 바로크 문학과 결합했다. 바로크 양식은 좀더 가볍고 덜 극적이며 과도하게 장식적인 로코코 양식으로 넘어가는 과도기의 특징적인 양식으로 18세기에 그 막을 내렸다.→ 서양음악사, 서양회화사

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