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Showing 1 - 9 of 9 matches in All Departments
First published in 1998. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
During the later 15th and in the 16th centuries pictures began to
be made without action, without place for heroism, pictures more
rueful than celebratory. In part, Renaissance art adjusted to the
social and economic pressures with an art we may be hard pressed to
recognize under that same rubric-an art not so much of perfected
nature as simply artless. Granted, the heroic and epic mode of the
Renaissance was that practiced most self-consciously and proudly.
Yet it is one of the accomplishments of Renaissance art that heroic
and epic subjects and style occasionally made way for less
affirmative subjects and compositional norms, for improvisation
away from the Vitruvian ideal. The limits of idealizing art, during
the very period denominated as High Renaissance, is a topic that
involves us in the history of class prejudice, of gender
stereotypes, of the conceptualization of the present, of attitudes
toward the ordinary, and of scruples about the power of sight
Why did Renaissance art come to matter so much, so widely, and for so long? Patricia Emison's answer depends on a recalibrated view of the long Renaissance from 1300 to 1600 synthesizing the considerable evolution in our understanding of the epoch since the foundational 19th-century studies of Burckhardt and Wolfflin. Demonstrating that the imitation of nature and of antiquity must no longer define its limits, she exposes Renaissance style's self-consciously modern aspect. She sets the art against the literary and political interests of the time, and analyzes works both of very familiar artists Leonardo, Michelangelo, and Raphael and of lesser-known figures, including Cima and Barocci. An understanding emerges of both the period's long-standing fame and its various historical debts. Moving beyond the Renaissance, Emison unfolds the varying and layered significance it has held from the Old Master era through Impressionism, Modernism, and Post-Modernism.
The latest addition to Phaidon's best-selling Colour Library series of affordable introductory books on the great masters and movements in art features all of Leonardo' da Vinci's painted works and a detailed illustrated introduction.
In this provocative book, Patricia Emison invites the reader to consider and reconsider how past thinkers--from Pliny and Alberti to Freud and Fried--have conceptualized the history of Western art. What a book review attempts to be for a book, this extended essay attempts to be for several hundred years' worth of books in a field: an indicator of problems with the old attempts and hopes for the new ones. It is a defense of art history for those outside the field who question its reliability or even its importance; it is a critique of art history for those in the field who may have been preoccupied with looking at trees but who might be interested in trying to see the forest.
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