Part one: The early Renaissance in Italy. The liberation of the painting -- Nicolas Pisano -- Giovanni Pisano and Arnolfo -- Cimabue, Cavallini, and other painters -- Giotto -- Giotto's pupils -- Duccio -- Sculptors of the early fourteenth century -- Simone Martini -- The Lorenzetti brothers -- Orcagna and his contemporaries -- Barna and Traini -- The fourteenth century outside Tuscany -- The competition for the doors of the Florence baptistry -- Late Gothic painters in Florence -- Jacopo della Quercia -- Nanni di Banco and the young Donatello -- The later Brunelleschi and architectural tradition: the later Ghiberti -- Masaccio -- Fra Angelico, Uccello -- Domenico Veneziano, Fra Filippo Lippi -- The later Donatello; Luca della Robbia -- Alberti -- Castagno, Pollaiuolo -- Trends in Florentine painting at mid-century -- Trends in Florentine sculpture at mid-century -- Sienese painting in the early fifteenth century -- Piero della Francesca -- Pisanello and Jacopo Bellini -- Mantegna -- Ferrara -- Pollaiuolo, Verrocchio -- Antonello da Messina ; Francesco Laurana -- Botticelli and Ghirlandaio -- Perugino and Pinturicchio -- Signorelli; Melozzo da Forlì -- Architecture in central Italy, 1465-1500 -- Painters in north Italy, 1450-1500 -- Sculptors and architects in north Italy, 1465-1500 -- Giovanni Bellini to 1500.
Part two: The high Renaissance in Italy. Leonardo to 1500 -- Filippino Lippi and Piero di Cosimo -- Painting in Milan after Leonardo -- Bramante -- Leonardo's last years -- Young Michelangelo -- Young Raphael -- Andrea Sansovino; Fra Bartolommeo -- Andrea del Sarto -- The Sistine ceiling -- Raphael's last years -- Architecture in Rome -- Giorgione -- Contemporaries of Giorgione -- Giulio Campagnola; Riccio -- Palma; Sebastiano del Piombo -- Ferrara and Bologna -- Dosso and his successors -- Young Titian -- Lotto, Pordenone -- Savoldo, Romanino -- Correggio -- Michaelangelo: the Medici years -- Sculptors in Michaelangelo's orbit -- Pontormo, Rosso -- Beccafumi, Parmigianino -- Mannerism in architecture -- Perino del Vaga; Florentine decorative sculpture -- Bronzino and his contemporaries -- Moretto and Venetian painters in north Italy -- Titian's later years -- Falconetto, Sanmicheli, Jacopo Sansovino -- Ammanati, Vignola -- Palladio -- Tintoretto -- Veronese -- Bassano, Vittoria -- Michaelangelo's late years -- Giambologna -- Leone Leoni, Moroni -- Alessi and Tibaldi -- Painters in Rome and Florence after 1550 -- Cambiaso, Barocci.
Part three: The Renaissance outside Italy. Jean Pucelle -- French painting, 1340-1380 -- Accomplishments around King Charles V -- Claus Sluter -- Broederlam and Bellechose -- The Duke of Berry and the Limbourg brothers -- The Boucicaut hours and the Rohan hours: some conclusions -- Prague and its following -- Jan van Eyck: the Ghent altarpiece -- Jan van Eyck: the other works -- The Master of Flémalle -- The Flémalle style in Germany and elsewhere -- Master Franke; Stefan Lochner -- Rogier van der Weyden -- Rogier's contemporaries -- Dirk Bouts -- Joos van Gent; Hugo van der Goes -- Geertgen tot Sint Jans; Memling -- Jean Fouquet -- Avignon and King René -- The growing role of sculpture: Hans Multscher -- Nicolaus Gerhaert and other sculptors -- German painting and prints in the wake of Rogier -- The wood sculptors -- Nuremberg and its sculptors -- Dürer -- Grünewald -- Cranach and Altdorfer -- Dürer pupils and other painters -- Holbein -- The last and remotest extensions of early Renaissance Flemish painting -- Bosch -- Antwerp and the high Renaissance -- Haarlem and Leyden -- Lucas van Leyden -- The beginning of Italiante architecture and sculpture -- The Scorel generation -- The hegemony of Antwerp -- Palaces and other building in Spain -- Palaces and their sculptors in France -- Architecture in the low countries, Germany, and England -- The portrait phenomenon -- Bruegel -- The move from Antwerp to Haarlem -- Painting and sculpture in Spain before El Greco -- El Greco.
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