Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles > 1400 to 1600 > Renaissance art
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Fictions of the Pose - Rembrandt Against the Italian Renaissance (Hardcover)
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Fictions of the Pose - Rembrandt Against the Italian Renaissance (Hardcover)
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The foundational question this book explores is: What happens when
portraits are interpreted as imitations or likenesses not only of
individuals but also of their acts of posing--when the observer's
attention is redirected so that the primary object the portrait
imitates becomes the likeness not of a person but of an act, the
act of sitting for one's portrait? This shift of attention involves
another: from the painter's to the sitter's part in the act of
(self-)portrayal.
At the ground level, "Fictions of the Pose" develops a hypothesis
about the structure and meaning of portraiture. That foundation
supports a first story devoted to the practices and politics of
early modern Italian and Dutch portraiture and a second story
devoted to Rembrandt's self-portraits, especially those in which he
poses in fancy dress as if he were a patron. The author approaches
the Rembrandt/Renaissance relation not as an art historian but as
an interpreter trained in literary studies, taunted by the
challenge of extending the practice of "close reading" from verbal
to visual media and fascinated by the way this practice can show
how individual works "talk back" to their contexts. The context for
Rembrandt, the object and target of his "looking-glass theater," is
the structure of patron/painter relations that developed during the
Renaissance and influenced the very different conditions of
patronage that emerged in the Dutch Republic around the turn of the
seventeenth century.
The book is in four parts. Parts One and Two comprise an
interpretive study of the technical and sociopolitical conditions
within which portraiture becomes an important if problematic medium
of self-representation in early modern Europe. The major portion of
these two sections considers the structure and the consequences of
a system of practices and conventions that governs poses in
commissioned portraits. In Part Three the scene shifts from Italian
to Dutch portraiture. Part Four is devoted to self-portraits by
Rembrandt that are interpreted as responses to the conditions
depicted in the first three parts. Through a series of close
readings of individual works, the author demonstrates the ironic,
polemical, and political force of Rembrandt's self-portraits.
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