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Sassetta, the subtle genius from Siena, revolutionized Italian painting with an altarpiece for the small Tuscan town of Borgo San Sepolcro in 1437 1444. Originally standing some six yards high, double-sided, with a splendid gilt frame over the main altar of the local Franciscan church, it was the Rolls Royce of early Renaissance painting. But its myriad figures and scenes tempted the collectors of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and today its disassembled panels can be found in twelve museums throughout Europe and the United States. To produce this landmark volume, experts in art and general history, painting technique and conservation, woodworking, architecture, and liturgy have joined forces across the boundaries of eight different nations. A model of collaboration, it opens new windows onto the creative process of the artist as he confronted a late-medieval church at a crossroad of cultures, the miracle-working body of a holy man, and a community of Franciscan friars breathing the exhilarating air of reform. To confront such challenges, Sassetta raised the most spiritual school of early Italian art, the Sienese, to a higher level of understanding, grace, and splendor.
Largely neglected for the four centuries after his death, the fifteenth century Italian artist Piero della Francesca is now seen to embody the fullest expression of the Renaissance perspective painter, raising him to an artistic stature comparable with that of Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo. But who was Piero, and how did he become the person and artist that he was? Until now, in spite of the great interest in his work, these questions have remained largely unanswered. Piero della Francesca: Artist and Man puts that situation right, integrating the story of Piero's artistic and mathematical achievements with the full chronicle of his life for the first time. Fortified by the discovery of over one hundred previously unknown documents, most unearthed by the author himself, James R. Banker at last brings this fascinating Renaissance enigma to life. The book presents us with Piero's friends, family, and collaborators, all set against the social background of the various cities and courts in which he lived - from the Tuscan commune of Sansepolcro in which he grew up, to Renaissance Florence, Ferrara, Ancona, Rimini, Rome, Arezzo, and Urbino, and eventually back to his home town for the final years of his life. As Banker shows, the cultural contexts in which Piero lived are crucial for understanding both the man and his paintings. From early masterpieces such as the Baptism of Christ through to later, Flemish-influenced works such as the Nativity, we gain a fascinating insight into how Piero's art developed over time, alongside his growing achievements in geometry in the later decades of his life. Along the way, the book addresses some persistent myths about this apparently most elusive of artists. As well as establishing a convincing case to clear up the long controversy over the year of Piero's birth, there are also answers to some big questions about the date of some of his major works, and a persuasive new interpretation of the much-debated Flagellation of Christ. This book is for all those who wish to know about the development of Piero as man, artist, and scholar, rather than simply to see him through a series of isolated great works. What emerges is a thoroughly intriguing Renaissance individual, firmly embedded in his social milieu, but forging an historic identity through his profound artistic and mathematical achievements.
James Banker and Carol Lansing have shaped a collection of the
works of Marvin B. Becker, a respected scholar in Florentine and
Renaissance history. Becker began his work in 1953 when he arrived
in Florence as a Fulbright Scholar, only eight years after the end
of World War II. Italy was still struggling with the turbulent wake
of the war's end. In those chaotic circumstances, Becker commenced
his study of the tumultuous past of Florentine society, producing a
rich amount of scholarly work to enhance the field.
The documented facts of Piero della Francesca's life are few, but the implicit contradictions in his life and art illuminate his social character. Despite his father's social and financial ambitions, della Francesca became a painter—not the most eminent of careers in the Renaissance city of San Sepolcro. Although della Francesca spent most of his life outside the centers of great intellectual achievement, he experimented with representations of three-dimensional space and wrote numerous treatises on the geometry of perspective that would later attract nineteenth-century painters and twentieth-century scholars of modernism. In The Culture of San Sepolcro during the Youth of Piero della Francesca, James R. Banker digs deeply into previously undiscovered archival evidence to examine della Francesca's yet unstudied earliest works and their connections to his putative formation in Florence. Banker's historical investigation also moves beyond the biography of this influential Renaissance artist, integrating social and art history to provide a rich and informative cultural context for della Francesca's development. Banker explores the influence of della Francesca's family on his life and work, in order to understand the role of the family in the vibrant artisan culture of the Tuscan Renaissance. Banker's analyses of the political and social organization of San Sepolcro, as well as its specific religious construction, further illuminate the intellectual background for della Francesca's growth as a pioneering artist. Modern intellectuals from Francis Bacon to Paul Cezanne and T. S. Elliot have considered Piero della Francesca's work a forebear to the modern exploration of line and abstraction. Banker's social biography of the artist will intrigue not only scholars of the Italian Renaissance and art historians but all scholars interested in the complex interplay between art and society.
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