scene design and stage lighting: The Renaissance to the Seventeenth Century
The Renaissance to the Seventeenth Century
The renaissance of scene design began in Italy. Sebastiano Serlio, in his
In his
Nicolo Sabbattini and Leone de' Sommi wrote on the use of lighting in the 16th cent.; in addition, they developed footlights and techniques for colored lights and for the dimming of lights. From the Renaissance period until the triumph of gas lighting in the mid-19th cent., great use was made of lamps, candles, and torches. Although they caused much work, odor, and smoke, ingenious effects were produced.
A revolution in scene design occurred in the late 17th cent. with the initiation of multiple or oblique perspective by Ferdinando Galli Bibiena. He used either two points of perspective or only one placed indiscriminately. The great scene designers of the period were also the great architects and artists. Their designs, baroque and heavy with movement and detail, became increasingly fussy; the set, in conflict with the actor, became the main attraction.
In France the first permanent theater had been the Hôtel de Bourgogne (1548), and in England, the Theatre (1576; later known as the Globe). The early English designer Inigo Jones was influenced by the Italians, although in his time scenery was reserved for court spectacles; Shakespeare's plays were given on a bare stage. The Restoration period saw the development of a “popular” theater, although it was still primarily for the upper classes.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- The Twentieth Century
- The Nineteenth Century
- The Eighteenth Century
- The Renaissance to the Seventeenth Century
- The Middle Ages
- Ancient Rome
- Ancient Greece
- Bibliography
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