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Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles > 1400 to 1600 > Renaissance art > General
The idea of the book was central throughout the western European
and the eastern Mediterranean world in the Middle Ages and the
Renaissance. From the beginning, the word for 'book'-sefer in
Hebrew, biblia in Greek, and liber in Latin-was identified with
sacred writings--the Holy Scriptures of Jews and Christians, who
were known as 'people of the book'. The centrality of the book to
medieval thought is reflected materially in the countless images of
books that appear in the manuscripts of the era, be they in the
most treasured, highly decorated, sacred texts or in devotional and
secular works as well. In Penned & Painted, Lucy Freeman
Sandler, one of one of the world's most respected authorities on
medieval art, takes us on a personal but highly insightful
exploration of some of the British Library's most precious
manuscript holdings and describes the many uses and meanings of
these 'books in books'. Through the fascinating face-to-face
discovery of 60 manuscripts, she investigates the various types and
forms of books as depicted in the era. How were they produced and
what did they look like? What do they tell us of the lives and
skills of the scribes and illuminators? What did these books record
and signify? How were they displayed, consumed and how did some of
these objects of supreme beauty even come to be wantonly destroyed?
Penned & Painted is presented in full-colour throughout and
includes a high number of images specially photographed for this
volume.
Venetian Disegno: New Frontiers circa 1420 to 1620 offers a fresh
perspective on the art of Venice and the Veneto. The volume brings
together the contributions of scholars and curators specialist on a
wide variety of artists and art forms including drawing, painting,
printmaking, sculpture and architecture. Venetian Disegno: New
Frontiers circa 1420 to 1620 takes disegno as its central theme,
that in its plurality of meaning allows for a consideration of the
conceptual role of design and the act of drawing. The relationship
between disegno and Renaissance Venetian art has historically been
a problematic one, with emphasis instead being placed on the
Venetian predilection for colore. This volume is reflective of an
ongoing challenge to this perspective and draws attention to the
importance of Venetian disegno and the study of drawings for
understanding various art forms. The book commences with a critical
study of what constitutes disegno in Venetian art. It does so
through questioning the historiography of Venetian artistic
scholarship and the restrictive framework and preconceptions that
have emerged before setting out the merits of a broader, more
inclusive approach. Disegno is applied in its multifaceted nature
to address the physical act of drawing, the tangible drawn object
and the role of design in artistic practice. The term
‘Venetian’ is taken to encompass both Venice and its mainland
territories not least because of the mobility of artists across and
beyond the region. Contributions are divided into five thematic
sections. The first, entitled ‘Peripheries’, frames the art of
Venice within a wider discourse on the movement of ideas across and
beyond the Veneto in locations including Padua, Verona and Rome. A
section on Media considers the origins and innovations that took
place in the use of materials such as blue paper, oil and coloured
chalks. In another, the theories that have developed on Venetian
notions of disegno are brought under scrutiny, addressing topics
such as the long upheld perspective that Venetian artists did not
draw, the role of sculpture in Tintoretto’s drawing practice and
the interrelation between the written and drawn line in Palma
Giovane’s draftsmanship. The section on Invention reflects on the
technical innovations that were facilitated through the uptake of
printmaking and the intellectual freedom granted by humanist
patrons. Finally, Function gets to the heart of the practical
purpose of disegno. Contributions focus on the workshops of the
Bellini family and Titian to consider the diverse ways they used
drawing within their artistic practices with an emphasis on
technical analysis. These sections are all preceded by
introductions that provide an overview on each theme while the
volume is bookended by two reflections on the state of research
into Venetian disegno and the potential for further progress.
Sumptuously illustrated with over 100 images with a comprehensive
bibliography, Venetian Disegno: New Frontiers circa 1420 to 1620
represents a significant contribution to scholarship on the art of
Venice, Renaissance workshops and drawing studies.
The Klesch portrait by Titian of Guidobaldo II with his son
Francesco Maria represents the duke of Urbino in his full power as
supreme commander of papal troops, with his heir next to him. This
rare, full-length double portrait has only recently been attributed
to Titian after undergoing extensive analyses and restoration,
revealing a beautiful painting in non finito manner, with bravura
impasto passages entirely characteristic of the master, all of
which is illustrated and explained in this new book. Titian
provided portraits for the greatest men and women of Europe,
Charles V and Philip II of Spain primary among them. For years the
Klesch portrait was dismissed as a workshop product - partly
because poor condition hid its true quality, but also because it
was not believed that Titian could have deigned to create one for
Guidobaldo, whose father Guidobaldo della Rovere (1514-1574) and
family had a long history of patronizing the artist. Recent
research, however, has thrown Guidobaldo's geopolitical
significance into relief. He was supreme commander of Venice, the
Papal States and then Spain. He sent thousands of soldiers to the
major conflicts of his day, particularly the defense of Malta
(1565) and the Battle of Lepanto (1571) and his engineers were
sought throughout Europe for their ingenuity. In this volume full
of new research, Ian Verstegen reveals that Guidobaldo was not
peripheral but central to Italian politics and was regarded at
several points in history as a key figure who could bring peace or
who could influence major conflicts on the Italian peninsula,
particularly the War of Siena, and then Pope Paul IV's offensive
war against Spain. Anne-Marie Eze gives the first comprehensive
examination of the painting's provenance, outlining the portrait's
vicissitudes and reception at different moments in its near
500-year history, reexamining received wisdom about its past
ownership, and presenting new documentary evidence to expand on and
fill gaps in our knowledge of its whereabouts. Finally, Matthew
Hayes and Ian Kennedy reflect on the technique, date, recent
conservation, and authorship of the painting, proving it to be a
masterpiece that only the great Titian could have created.
Campbell and Cole, respected teachers and active researchers, draw
on traditional and current scholarship to present complex
interpretations in this new edition of their engaging account of
Italian Renaissance art. The book's unique decade-by-decade
structure is easy to follow, and permits the authors to tell the
story of art not only in the great centres of Rome, Florence and
Venice, but also in a range of other cities and sites throughout
Italy, including more in this edition from Naples, Padua and
Palermo. This approach allows the artworks to take centre-stage, in
contrast to the book's competitors, which are organized by location
or by artist. Other updates for this edition include an expanded
first chapter on the Trecento, and a new `Techniques and Materials'
appendix that explains and illustrates all of the major art-making
processes of the period. Richly illustrated with high-quality
reproductions and new photography of recent restorations, it
presents the classic canon of Renaissance painting and sculpture in
full, while expanding the scope of conventional surveys by offering
a more thorough coverage of architecture, decorative and domestic
arts, and print media.
This stunning catalogue presents The Courtauld's outstanding
collection of works by Renaissance artist Girolamo Francesco Maria
Mazzola, better known as Parmigianino (1503-1540). This catalogue
accompanies a display of works by Parmigianino at The Courtauld,
including his famous and enigmatic painting of the Virgin and
Child, as well as drawn studies for his most ambitious projects
such as the Madonna of the Long Neck and the frescoes of the church
of Santa Maria della Steccata in Parma. The latter was the last and
most important commission of his life and would have been his
triumphal homecoming. Instead, Parmigianino became entangled in his
experimental processes and failed to complete it, leading to his
brief imprisonment for breach of contract. Fundamentally a
draftsman at heart, Parmigianino drew relentlessly during his
relatively short life, and around a thousand of his drawings have
survived. The Courtauld's collection comprises twenty-four sheets.
In preparation for the catalogue, new photography and technical
examinations have been carried out on all the works revealing two
new drawings that were previously unknown, hidden underneath their
historic mounts. They have also helped to better identify
connections between some of the drawings and the finished paintings
for which they were conceived. The catalogue illustrates the whole
Courtauld collection, which also includes two paintings and more
than ten prints. As a printmaker, Parmigianino is considered to
have been the first to experiment with etching in Italy and was a
pioneer of the chiaroscuro woodcut technique. His refined and
graceful compositions were much appreciated by his contemporaries
and exalted by the artist and biographer Giorgio Vasari (1511-74).
This catalogue and display have been curated by Gottardo and
Rebecchini in collaboration with former and current research
students at The Courtauld, and technical research has been
conducted by members of The Courtauld Conservation Institute. A
truly collaborative project, the catalogue sheds light on an artist
who approached every technique with unprecedented freedom and
produced innovative works which were studied and admired by artists
and collectors for many years to come.
Dress became a testing ground for masculine ideals in Renaissance
Italy. With the establishment of the ducal regime in Florence in
1530, there was increasing debate about how to be a nobleman. Was
fashionable clothing a sign of magnificence or a source of mockery?
Was the graceful courtier virile or effeminate? How could a man
dress for court without bankrupting himself? This book explores the
whole story of clothing, from the tailor's workshop to spectacular
court festivities, to show how the male nobility in one of Italy's
main textile production centers used their appearances to project
social, sexual, and professional identities. Sixteenth-century male
fashion is often associated with swagger and ostentation but this
book shows that Florentine clothing reflected manhood at a much
deeper level, communicating a very Italian spectrum of male virtues
and vices, from honor, courage, and restraint to luxury and excess.
Situating dress at the heart of identity formation, Currie traces
these codes through an array of sources, including unpublished
archival records, surviving garments, portraiture, poetry, and
personal correspondence between the Medici and their courtiers.
Addressing important themes such as gender, politics, and
consumption, Fashion and Masculinity in Renaissance Florence sheds
fresh light on the sartorial culture of the Florentine court and
Italy as a whole.
This richly illustrated and beautifully produced scholarly
catalogue of the superlative collection of Renaissance and Baroque
bronze figurative statuettes from the Hill collection accompanies
an exhibition of the collection at the Frick Collection, New York,
opening late January 2014. Spanning from 1470 to 1740, the bronzes
presented are of exceptional quality and exemplify the development
of bronze statuettes from 1470 in Renaissance Italy to their
dissemination across the artistic centres of Europe. The Hill
Collection is distinguished by rare, autograph masterpieces by
Italian sculptors such as Andrea Riccio and Giambologna, and has
the most important collection of Baroque Bronzes by Giuseppe
Piamontini in the world. Its holding of works by the Giambologna
school is the strongest found in any single collection, with the
sole exception of the Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence. These
evoke the splendour of the late Renaissance courts, while the
richness of the international BAroque is represented by religious
themes by Alessandro Algardi, northern bronzes by Adriaen de Vries
and Hubert Gerhard, and a remarkable assemblage of French 16th- and
early 17th-century bronzes in the classical mode by Barthélemny
Prieur and from the circle of Ponce Jacquiot. The Hill Collection
reveals the range of artistry, invention and technical refinement
characteristic of sculptures created when the tradition of the
European statuette was at its height. The catalogue includes
detailed biographies of each of the artists represented, and is
introduced with essays by the distinguished authors. Patricia
Wengraf is one of the world's leading dealers in bronzes, scuplture
and works of art, and in her particular speciality, bronzes of the
15th-18th centuries, her knowledge and connoisseurship are of world
repute. Denise Allen is Curator of Renaissance Paintings and
Sculpture at the Frick Collection. Claudia Kryza-Gersch, formerly
at the Kunstkammer, Vienna, is an independent scholar renowned for
her studies of North Italian bronzes of the 16th and 17th
centuries. Dimitrios Zikos, in Florence, an independent scholar
renowned for his knowledge of the Florentine archives from c. 1550
to 1740, has curate many exhibitions at the Museo Nazionale del
Bargello, Florence. Rupert Harris is the leading conservator of
metalwork and sculpture in the UK.
"Medieval renaissance Baroque" celebrates Marilyn Aronberg Lavin's
breakthrough achievements in both the print and digital realms of
art and cultural history. Fifteen friends and colleagues present
tributes and essays that reflect every facet of this renowned
scholar's brilliant career. Tribute presenters include Ellen
Burstyn, Langdon Hammer, Phyllis Lambert, and James Marrow.
Contributors include Kirk Alexander, Horst Bredekamp, Nicola
Courtright, David Freedberg, Jack Freiberg, Marc Fumaroli, David A.
Levine, Daniel T. Michaels, Elizabeth Pilliod, Debra Pincus, and
Gary Schwartz. 79 illustrations, bibliography of Marilyn Lavin's
works, index.
Humanism is usually thought to come to England in the early
sixteenth century. In this book, however, Daniel Wakelin uncovers
the almost unknown influences of humanism on English literature in
the preceding hundred years. He considers the humanist influences
on the reception of some of Chaucer's work and on the work of
important authors such as Lydgate, Bokenham, Caxton, and Medwall,
and in many anonymous or forgotten translations, political
treatises, and documents from the fifteenth and early sixteenth
centuries. At the heart of his study is a consideration of William
Worcester, the fifteenth-century scholar.
Wakelin can trace the influence of humanism much earlier than was
thought, because he examines evidence in manuscripts and early
printed books of the English study and imitation of antiquity, in
polemical marginalia on classical works, and in the ways in which
people copied and shared classical works and translations. He also
examines how various English works were shaped by such reading
habits and, in turn, how those English works reshaped the reading
habits of the wider community. Humanism thus, contrary to recent
strictures against it, appears not as 'top-down' dissemination, but
as a practical process of give-and-take between writers and
readers. Humanism thus also prompts writers to imagine their
potential readerships in ways which challenge them to re-imagine
the political community and the intellectual freedom of the reader.
Our views both of the fifteenth century and of humanist literature
in English are transformed.
A fascinating collection of writings from the great polymath of the
Italian Renaissaince, Leonardo da Vinci. There are sections
covering the great man's thoughts on life, art and science. Maurice
Baring trawled the available manuscripts to distil da Vinci's
writings on these subjects into a single, accessible tome, which
will be of interest to students of da Vinci, the Renaissance and
the history of both art and science.
This generously illustrated volume on the work of Botticelli makes
the world's greatest art accessible to readers of every level of
appreciation. The Florentine painter Botticelli personifies the
Golden Age of the early Renaissance. Best known for The Birth of
Venus and Primavera, Botticelli painted with an expressive
poeticism that eschewed formal realism. He used line and color to
gorgeous effect, creating some of the most beloved and familiar
images of all time. Overflowing with impeccably reproduced images,
this book offers full-page spreads of masterpieces as well as
highlights of smaller details--allowing the viewer to appreciate
every aspect of the artist's technique and oeuvre. Chronologically
arranged, the book covers important biographical and historic
events that reflect the latest scholarship. Additional information
includes a list of works, timeline, and suggestions for further
reading.
Part of a series of exciting and luxurious Flame Tree Notebooks.
Combining high-quality production with magnificent fine art, the
covers are printed on foil in five colours, embossed, then foil
stamped. And they're powerfully practical: a pocket at the back for
receipts and scraps, two bookmarks and a solid magnetic side flap.
These are perfect for personal use and make a dazzling gift. This
example features Michelangelo's Creation Hands
Raphael's "St. George and the Dragon" is the work of a genius -- an
exquisitely rendered vision of heroism and innocence by one of the
greatest painters of all time. Yet the painting's creation is only
the beginning of its fascinating story, which spans centuries of
power play and intrigue, and has made it a witness to the rise and
fall of the great powers of the Western world as it seduced its
owners to ever greater heights of corruption and greed.
Raphael's masterpiece was commissioned by Duke Guidobaldo da
Montefeltro, the ruler of Urbino, in 1506. Raphael was only
twenty-three years old, but he had already begun to acquire a
reputation as a painter who was as ruthless in his pursuit of money
as he was talented. The duke sent the painting to England's King
Henry VII as a thank-you for naming him a knight in the Order of
the Garter.
The painting then mysteriously disappeared for one hundred years
until King Charles I saw it hanging in the collection of the Earl
of Pembroke and acquired it for a book of Holbein drawings. After
Charles was beheaded in 1649, his collection was broken up and the
painting made its way to the private gallery of the third-richest
man in France, where it was ensconced in its own special room.
Thirty years later, the philosopher Diderot was instructed by
Catherine the Great of Russia to buy it for her vast collection at
the Hermitage.
The heroic curators of the Hermitage protected "St. George and
the Dragon" from fire, water, and the anarchists of the Russian
Revolution, until Joseph Stalin sold it in 1930 to raise cash. The
secret buyer was Andrew Mellon, Treasury Secretary of the United
States, who in doing so blatantly violated a U.S. sanction against
doing any business with Soviet Russia. Mellon eventually founded
The National Gallery in Washington, D.C., where "St. George and the
Dragon" rests to this day.
Exceptionally written and breathlessly paced, "The Dragon's
Trail" is a microhistory that touches on the rise of the Tudors,
the downfall of a Stuart, the twilight of the French aristocracy,
the terrors of the Bolshevik revolution, and the depths of the Cold
War -- all witnessed by one painting that inspired the best and the
worst instincts in its owners.
Seventeenth-century authors so thoroughly imbued the language and
imagery of the Bible in vernacular translation that their texts are
to be read as attempts to inscribe themselves within the realm of
the sacred. This book analyzes how three seventeenth-century
English authors fashion themselves as a specific biblical figure,
and how they fashion themselves in their works in order to bring
their spiritual lives in line with the narrative arch of a biblical
type.
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