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This enlightening book aims to fill the gap in the literature on
women's lives from the mid-fourteenth to the mid-seventeenth
century, a time in which Italian urban societies saw much debate on
the nature of women and on their roles, education and behaviour.
Indeed these were debates which would in subsequent years resonate
throughout Europe as a whole. Using a broad range of contemporary
source material, most of which has never been translated before,
this book illuminates the ideals and realities informing the lives
of women within the context of civic and courtly culture. The text
is divided into three sections: contemporary views on the nature of
women, and ethical and aesthetic ideals seen as suitable to them;
life cycles from birth to death, punctuated by the rites of passage
of betrothal, marriage and widowhood; women's roles in the convent,
the court, the workplace, and in cultural life. Through their
exploration of these themes, Rogers and Tinagli demonstrate that
there was no single 'Renaissance woman'. The realities of women(1)s
experiences were rich and various, and their voices speak of
diverse possibilities for emotionally rich and socially useful
lives. This will be essential reading for students and teachers of
society and culture during the Italian Renaissance, as well as
gender historians working on early modern Europe. -- .
The anthology of original sources from c.1400 to 1650, translated
form Italian or Latin, and accompanied by introductions and
bibliographies, is concerned with women's varied involvement with
the visual arts and material culture of their day. The readers
gains a sense of women not only as patrons of architecture,
painting, sculpture and the applied arts, but as users of art both
on special occasions, like civic festivities or pilgrimages, and in
everyday social and devotional life. As they seek to adapt and
embellish their persons and their environments, acquire paintings
for solace or prestige, or cultivate relationships with artists,
women emerge as discerning participants in the consumer culture of
their time, and often as lively commentators on it. Their fervent
participation in religious life is also seen in their use of art in
devotional rituals, or their commissioning of tombs or altarpieces
to perpetuate their memory and aid them in the afterlife. -- .
This richly illustrated books tells the story of the different ways
in which women were represented in Italian Renaissance painting. It
is clearly arranged into four distinct areas that relate to the
function of the art work: marriage furniture, portraiture, the nude
and depictions of female saints. Uncovering the many layers of
meaning hidden in the iconography of these paintings, the book
reintroduces us to the cultural context in which the artists
operated, providing interesting new readings of well-known works by
Raphael, Leonardo and Titian, among others. -- .
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