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Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles > 1400 to 1600
In Art, Ritual, and Civic Identity in Medieval Southern Italy, Nino
Zchomelidse examines the complex and dynamic roles played by the
monumental ambo, the Easter candlestick, and the liturgical scroll
in southern Italy and Sicily from the second half of the tenth
century, when the first such liturgical scrolls emerged, until the
first decades of the fourteenth century, when the last monumental
Easter candlestick was made. Through the use of these objects, the
interior of the church was transformed into the place of the story
of salvation, making the events of the Bible manifest. By linking
rites and setting, liturgical furnishings could be used to stage a
variety of biblical events, in accordance with specific feast days.
Examining the interaction of liturgical performance and the
ecclesiastical stage, this book explores the creation, function,
and evolution of church furnishings and manuscripts.
Titian's works are often seen as embodying the famous tradition of
Venetian Renaissance painting. But how 'Venetian' was Titian, and
can his unique works be taken as truly representative of his
adoptive city? This comprehensive new study, covering Titian's long
career and varied output, highlights the tensions between the
individualism of his work and the conservative mores of Venice.
Titian and the End of the Venetian Renaissance argues that Titian's
works were self-consciously original, freely and intentionally
undermining the traditional, more modest approach to painting in
Venice - a position that frequently caused disputes with local
artists and patrons. This book charts Titian's early stylistic
independence from his master Giovanni Bellini, his radical
innovations to the classical altarpiece and his meteoric break from
the normal confines of Venice's artistic culture. Titian
competitively cultivated a professional identity and his dynamic
career was epitomized by the development of his 'late style', which
set him apart from all predecessors and was intended to defy
emulation by any followers. It was through this final
individualistic departure that Titian effectively brought the
Renaissance tradition of painting to an end. This ground-breaking
interpretation will be of interest to all scholars and students of
Renaissance and Venetian art history.
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