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Lives of Leonardo (Paperback)
Giorgio Vasari, Matteo Bandello, Paolo Giovio, Sabba Castiglione; Edited by Charles Robertson
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R245
Discovery Miles 2 450
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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For many people the greatest artist, and the quintessential
Renaissance man, Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) was a painter,
architect, theatre designer, engineer, sculptor, anatomist,
geometer, naturalist, poet and musician. His Last Supper in Milan
has been called the greatest painting in Western art. Illegitimate,
left-handed and homosexual, Leonardo never made a straightforward
career. But from his earliest apprenticeship with the Florentine
painter and sculptor Andrea Verrochio, his astonishing gifts were
recognised. His life led him from Florence to militaristic Milan
and back, to Rome and eventually to France, where he died in the
arms of the King, Francis I. As one of the greatest exponents of
painting of his time, Leonardo was celebrated by his fellow
Florentine Vasari (who was nevertheless responsible for covering
over the great fresco of the Battle of Anghiari with his own
painting). Vasari's carefully researched life of Leonardo remains
one of the main sources of our knowledge, and is printed here
together with the three other early biographies, and the major
account by his French editor Du Fresne. Personal reminiscences by
the novelist Bandello, and humanist Saba di Castiglione, round out
the picture, and for the first time the extremely revealing
imagined dialogue between Leonardo and the Greek sculptor Phidias,
by the painter and theorist Lomazzo, is published in English. An
introduction by the scholar Charles Robertson places these writings
and the career of Leonardo in context. Approximately 50 pages of
colour illustrations, including the major paintings and many of the
astonishing drawings, give a rich overview of Leonardo's work and
mind.
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Lives of Tintoretto (Paperback)
Giorgio Vasari, Pietro Aretino, Carlo Ridolfi, Andrea Calmo, Veronica Franco, …
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R303
R253
Discovery Miles 2 530
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The most exhilarating painter of the Renaissance and arguably of
the whole of western art, Tintoretto was known as Il Furioso
because of the attack and energy of his style. His vaunting
ambition is recorded in the inscription he placed in his studio: l
disegno di Michelangelo ed il colorito di Tiziano ("Michelangelo's
drawing and Titian's colour"). The Florentines Vasari and Borghini,
and the Venetians Ridolfi and Boschini wrote the earliest
biographies of the artist. The four accounts are related to each
other and form the backbone of the critical success of Tintoretto.
Borghini is the first one to give some information about Marietta
Tintoretto, also an artist, and Ridolfi is the richest in anecdotes
about the artist's life and personality - including the one about
the inscription which he may, however, have invented. Boschini, a
witty Venetian nationalist, wrote his account in dialect verse. El
Greco, whose marginal notes to Vasari are included for the first
time in English, Calmo and Franco knew Tintoretto personally and
their writings give a real flavour of this complicated man.
Unavailable in any form for many years, these biographies have been
newly edited for this edition. They are introduced by the scholar
Carlo Corsato, who places each in its artistic and literary
context. Approximately 50 pages of colour illustrations cover the
full range of Tintoretto's astonishing output.
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Lives of Giovanni Bellini (Paperback)
Giorgio Vasari, Carlo Ridolfi, Marco Boschini, Isabella D'Este, Davide Gasparotto
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R295
R224
Discovery Miles 2 240
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Scion of an artistic dynasty, Giovanni Bellini is arguably the
greatest Venetian painter of the early Renaissance. His astonishing
naturalism revolutionised altarpiece painting and is still a source
of wonder, as any visit to Frari in Venice will confirm. Most of
what we know about this great artist comes from the earliest
biographies by Vasari and Ridolfi printed here - the Ridolfi never
before translated into English. A different and very personal
insight is given by extensive correspondence with Bellini's great
but neglected patron Isabella d'Este.
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Lives of Titian (Paperback)
Giorgio Vasari, Sperone Speroni, Pietro Aretino, Ludovico Dolce, Raffaele Borghini, …
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R296
R246
Discovery Miles 2 460
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Titian (c. 1488-1576) was recognised very early on as the leading
painter of his generation in Venice. Starting in the studio of the
aged Giovanni Bellini, Titian, with his contemporary Giorgione,
almost immediately started to expand the range of what was possible
in painting, converting Bellini's statuesque style into something
far more impressionistic and romantic. This restless spirit of
innovation and improvisation never left him, and during his long
life he experimented with a number of different styles, the
brushwork of his last great paintings showing a mysterious poetry
that has never been equalled. This volume in the series Lives of
the Artists collects the major writings about Titian by his
contemporaries and near contemporaries. The centrepiece is the
biography by Vasari, who as a Florentine found Titian's very
Venetian sense of colour and transient forms a challenge to his
concept of art as design. The poet Ariosto and sparkling letter
writer Aretino had a more nuanced view of their friend's work, and
Priscianese's account of a dinner party with Titian, and the
contributions by Speroni and Dolce, and the slightly later Tuscan
critic Borghini, round out the picture of this hugely thoughtful,
intellectual artist, whose paintings remain some of the most
sensual and affecting in all of Western art. Mostly unavailable in
any form for many years, these writings have been newly edited for
this edition. They are introduced by the scholar Carlo Corsato, who
places each in its artistic and literary context. Approximately 50
pages of colour illustrations cover the full range of Titian's
great oeuvre.
'Never was a painter more nobly joyous, never did an artist take a
greater delight in life, seeing it all as a kind of breezy festival
and feeling it through the medium of perpetual success...He was the
happiest of painters.' Henry James on Veronese, 1909 Collected here
for the first time, these fascinating early biographies (one of
which has never been translated before) describe and celebrate the
astonishingly fertile art of Paolo Veronese. Most of what we know
about Veronese comes from these three essays. 'I have known this
Paolino and I have seen his beautiful works. He deserves to have a
great volume written in praise of him, for his pictures prove that
he is second to no other painter', wrote Veronese's contemporary
Annibale Carracci in the margins to his copy of Vasari's writings,
continuing 'and this fool passes over him in four lines. And just
because he was not Florentine.' It was indeed a measure of his fame
that Vasari, whose Life of Veronese is reprinted here, should have
overcome his pro-Tuscan prejudices to write about his great
Venetian contemporary; and he was followed in this by another
Florentine, the theorist Raffaele Borghini. But the most striking
record of the impact of Veronese's art on his countrymen is the
extensive biography by his fellow Venetian, Carlo Ridolfi. Entirely
original in the seriousness and passion with which he approached
his subject, Ridolfi permanently changed the course of writing
about art. This is the first translation of his work into English.
Translated and introduced by Xavier F. Salomon, curator of
Veronese: Renaissance Magnificence at the National Gallery, London.
Fifty pages of colour illustrations cover the span of Veronese's
breath-taking career.
Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the
1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly
expensive. Hesperides Press are republishing these classic works in
affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the original text
and artwork.
Raphael (1483-1520) was for centuries considered the greatest
artist who ever lived. Much of what we know about him comes from
this biography, written by the Florentine painter Giorgio Vasari
and first published in 1550. Vasari's Lives of the Painters was the
first attempt to write a systematic history of Italian art. The
Life of Raphael is a key text not only for the appreciation of
Raphael's own art - whose development and chronology Vasari
describes in detail, together with the spectacular social career of
the first painter to be mooted, it was claimed, as a Cardinal - but
also for its unprecedented attention to theoretical issues.
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