
Art students in traditional ateliers are most often taught to draw and paint from a central, head-on point of view: the object being represented is directly in front of the artist, at eye level. This is not surprising as the typical easel painting or commission demands nothing more. In addition, frescoed ceilings seem to be a thing of the past. But during the Renaissance and Baroque periods the ability to convincingly represent figures and architecture as seen from below was a sought after skill.
Di sotto in sù, also called prospettiva melozziana, is an Italian term from the Renaissance which means from below, upwards. It describes an extreme form of illusionistic foreshortening in which the figures or objects painted on a ceiling appear to be floating or suspended in space above the viewer.[1] One goal of the method was to convince the viewer that the ceiling did not exist or that it was dome-shaped when it was really flat. An early proponent of this type of painting was Andrea Mantegna. His fresco for the Camera degli Sposi in Mantua is the first image, above.
Below is Correggio’s ceiling fresco, Assumption of the Virgin in Parma.

Here’s a detail, showing Eve offering the fruit from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.

Here are two of Correggio’s studies, one for Eve and one for another character, done from life.

The image below is Pietro da Cortona’s ceiling fresco in the Palazzo Barberini, from the 1630′s.

A variant of di sotto in sù is the term quadratura, which applies more to the painted illusion of architecture as seen from below.
- IAN CHILVERS. “sotto in sù, di.” The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists. 2003. ^
Darren R. Rousar studied privately with Richard Lack and attended Atelier LeSueur, both in Minnesota, as well as Studio Cecil-Graves in Florence, Italy. He was the assistant director and an instructor at Charles Cecil Studios in Florence, after which he became vice president of The Minnesota River School of Fine Art in Burnsville. He has been a professional artist for more than 20 years, focusing mainly on Christian themes. Darren is currently an art teacher, technology coordinator and the eLearning coordinator at Providence Academy in Plymouth, MN. He is the author of two books, Cast Drawing Using the Sight-Size Approach and Cast Painting Using the Sight-Size Approach. He also produced a companion DVD, Sight-Size and the Art of Seeing.
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Now there were in the same country shepherds living out in the fields, keeping watch over their flock by night. And behold, an angel of the Lord stood before them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them, and they were greatly afraid. Then the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid, for [...]
A technique closely related to grisaille is verdaccio. Verdaccio is an Italian term and its root is the word verde, which means green in Italian. Originally defined as a color or mixture of colors, verdaccio is now often thought of as a method of underpainting in greenish tones. This technique is very close to a [...]
In this, the latest installment of my artist’s eyes series, I want to take a look at William McGregor Paxton (1869–1941). As one of his many artistic descendants I can’t help but be fascinated by him and his work but for the moment I am staying away from his biography. Instead I want to focus [...]
The term grisaille is generally thought to mean gray and that is what the French word means in English. While I was not taught to paint using a grisaille (after cast painting studies that is), I was taught that the definition of a grisaille was a fully realized underpainting done in grays. The idea was [...]
Was Rembrandt Stereoblind? Margaret S. Livingstone, Ph.D., author of the fascinating book, Vision and Art: The Biology of Seeing has concluded that we was. Dr. Livingstone’s contention is based upon measurements she and a colleague, Bevil R. Conway, Ph.D., made of the positions of Rembrandt’s eyes in all 36 of his self portraits. Apparently the [...]
The Objective Eye: Color, Form and Reality in the Theory of Art by John Hyman was something of a revelation for me, especially the preface and introduction. The Objective Eye is really about aesthetic philosophy, or in Hyman’s own words, “the philosophical study of pictorial art.” He begins by describing historical and current views of [...]
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Studio Rousar Blog Archives
Sight-Size
Sight-Size is a way of seeing and comparing nature to your artwork from a given distance. The books and DVD shown below explain it in detail.



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