5 Things to Know About Perspective

Pietro Perugino (c.1445-1523), Giving of the Keys to St. Peter, 1481. The Sistine Chapel, Vatican City. Photo: ©The Bridgeman Art Library, London

Pietro Perugino’s The Delivery of the Keys inspired Raphael’s School of Athens.

1. One-Point

Raphael, who painted School of Athens on page 5, was a great Renaissance master, but he didn’t invent perspective. His teacher, Pietro Perugino (Pee-EH-troh Pehr-ooh-JEEN-oh), taught him. In Perugino’s painting above, done 30 years before Raphael’s, large detailed figures stand in the foreground and the figures in the background are smaller and harder to see. As in Raphael’s painting, all of the architectural lines recede to a single vanishing point.

2. Two-Point

Masaccio (1401-1428), The Tribute Money (detail). Fresco. The Brancacci Chapel, S. Maria del Carmine, Florence, Italy. Photo: Scala / Art Resource, NY.

Using two-point perspective, Masaccio shows two sides of one building.

Early Renaissance artist Masaccio (mah-SAH-choh) used the new system of perspective to set his solid, three-dimensional figures in very real-looking settings. In this detail from his fresco The Tribute Money, two men stand in front of a building painted using two-point perspective. The corner is closest to us, allowing us to see two sides of the building at once. One wall recedes toward one vanishing point, and the other recedes toward a second vanishing point located outside the frame of the picture. For a diagram showing two-point perspective, see this article.

3. Aerial

Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519), Mona Lisa. Oil on wood, 77 x 53 cm. The Louvre, Paris, France. Photo: Réunion des Musées Nationaux / Art Resource, NY.

Mona Lisa’s smile gets the most attention, but the mountains also add mystery to Leonardo da Vinci’s masterpiece.

 

Not all perspective is linear. Renaissance artists also made their paintings—especially their landscapes—look more real using aerial perspective. You can see an example of this in Leonardo da Vinci’s masterpiece Mona Lisa. In the background, the closest mountains are darker and clearer. Farther away, the forms are smaller and hazier. On the horizon, the colors of the forms blend in with the blue of the sky. The winding roads and mountain peaks draw attention to the focal point—the figure’s face and her famous smile.

4. Foreshortening

Paolo Uccello (1397-1475), The Battle of San Romano, (detail), 1423, 1456. The Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy. Photo: Eric Lessing / Art Resource, NY.

How does Paolo Uccello use perspective in this battle scene?

Some Renaissance artists said that Paolo Uccello (POW-loh oo-CHEL-oh) was obsessed with perspective. He’d stay up all night making mathematical diagrams for his paintings. In his famous Battle of San Romano (detail at right), the foreground is filled with foreshortened objects like the back legs of the brown horse on the right. The hooves are enlarged so they seem to be coming toward the viewer. Can you spot other foreshortened objects in this scene?

5. Distortion

Giorgio de Chirico (1888-1978), The Anxiety of Waiting, Fondazione Magnani Rocca, Corte di Mamiano, Italy. Photo: Scala / Art Resource, NY. © 2012 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / SIAE, Rome.

What elements make Giorgio de Chirico’s painting seem unnatural and surreal?

By the 20th century, photography had taken the place of most realistic painting. Artists began using perspective to comment on the anxiety of modern life. Surrealist Giorgio de Chirico (JOR-joh duh-KEER-ih-koh) painted the scene at right using one-point perspective. But he exaggerated the angle of the converging lines, so the buildings seem to rush at the viewer. The diagonal shadows clash with the lines, creating confusion. A ship’s sail rising above the horizon line gives the work a dream-like quality.

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