Mannerism
0 sources
Mannerism
Summary
Mannerism is an art movement[1]. Mannerism ranks in the top 5% of art_movement entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,577 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Mannerism's instance of is recorded as art movement[3].
- Mannerism's instance of is recorded as cultural movement[4].
- Mannerism's instance of is recorded as architectural style[5].
- Mannerism's instance of is recorded as style[6].
- Mannerism's instance of is recorded as historical period[7].
- Mannerism's instance of is recorded as art style[8].
- Mannerism followed High Renaissance[9].
- Mannerism was followed by Baroque[10].
- Mannerism is a type of Renaissance[11].
- Mannerism's Commons category is recorded as Mannerism[12].
- Mannerism began on 1520[13].
- Mannerism began on 1525[14].
- Mannerism ended on 1600[15].
- Mannerism's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Mannerism[16].
- Mannerism's Commons gallery is recorded as Mannerism[17].
- Mannerism's described by source is recorded as Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1926–1947)[18].
- Mannerism's described by source is recorded as Armenian Soviet Encyclopedia, vol. 7[19].
- Mannerism's described by source is recorded as National Encyclopedia of Uzbekistan[20].
- Mannerism's different from is recorded as mannerism[21].
- Mannerism's significant person is recorded as El Greco[22].
- Mannerism's significant person is recorded as Benvenuto Cellini[23].
- Mannerism's significant person is recorded as Bronzino[24].
- Mannerism's significant person is recorded as Pontormo[25].
- Mannerism's significant person is recorded as Parmigianino[26].
- Mannerism's significant person is recorded as Rosso Fiorentino[27].
Body
Definition and Type
Recorded instance of include art movement[3], cultural movement[4], architectural style[5], style[6], historical period[7], and art style[8]. Mannerism is a type of Renaissance[11].
Why It Matters
Mannerism ranks in the top 5% of art_movement entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,577 views/month).[2] Mannerism has Wikipedia articles in 28 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Mannerism is known by 51 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]