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The Essential Characteristics of Renaissance Artists

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Studying the great masters of the Renaissance means going beyond the surface of images: it means delving into the invisible principles that governed their language.
In his work of reconstruction, Navaret does not simply reproduce lost forms, but immerses himself in that aesthetic and spiritual universe to bring it back to life with the fidelity that only a profound inner dialogue can grant.

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Here are some of the fundamental aspects he recognizes and restores:

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Proportion as universal harmony
Not a cold calculation, but the pursuit of a hidden balance that reflects the laws of nature. Every line and every form was born from a cosmic sense of order.

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Light as revelation
Shadow and brightness were not merely optical effects, but instruments to breathe inner life into figures. Light conveyed the soul, not just the body.

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Symbolism as a secret language
Every detail — a gesture, an object, a color — held a broader meaning, tied to spiritual and philosophical values. Art was a code, not a mere ornament.

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Nature as a silent teacher
Flowers, animals, landscapes: nothing was accidental. The truth of creation was observed with rigor and translated into visible beauty, to suggest a bond between man and the cosmos.

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The unity of technique and vision
Brushstrokes, glazes, geometries, and perspectives were never an end in themselves, but instruments serving a greater idea: to render eternal what is fragile and human.

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The study of characters
Each figure was not merely a face, but a microcosm of meanings. The proportions of the features, the symmetry of the bodies, the interplay of gestures, and even posture obeyed secret rules of geometry and harmony. At the same time, each character was placed within a precise historical context: clothing, attitudes, and settings were clues of a time, a society, a destiny. To reconstruct them means to restore not only the image, but the very soul of an era.
It is important to emphasize that, although some characters may at times share similar traits with others, their identity cannot be mistaken: it is context, symbolism, and compositional logic that ensure distinction, preventing overlaps or misinterpretations.

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