Open AccessDissertation
Collaborative Painting Between Minds and Hands: Art Criticism, Connoisseurship, and Artistic Sodality in Early Modern Italy
Colin Alexander Murray
- 01 Nov 2016
81
TL;DR: In this article, it is argued that critics of the seventeenth century were particularly attentive to the practical conditions of collaboration as the embodiment of theory, and that the greatest painting would combine the most highly regarded old masters, each contributing their particular talents towards the whole.
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Abstract: The intention of this dissertation is to open up collaborative pictures to meaningful analysis by accessing the perspectives of early modern viewers. The Italian primary sources from the fifteenth to the seventeenth centuries yield a surprising amount of material indicating both common and changing habits of thought when viewers looked at multiple authorial hands working on an artistic project. It will be argued in the course of this dissertation that critics of the seventeenth century were particularly attentive to the practical conditions of collaboration as the embodiment of theory. At the heart of this broad discourse was a trope extolling painters for working with what appeared to be one hand, a figurative and adaptable expression combining the notion of the united corpo and the manifold meanings of the artist’s mano. Hardly insistent on uniformity or anonymity, writers generally believed that collaboration actualized the ideals of a range of social, cultural, theoretical, and cosmological models in which variously formed types of unity were thought to be fostered by the mutual support of the artists’ minds or souls. Further theories arose in response to Giovanni Paolo Lomazzo’s hypothesis in 1590 that the greatest painting would combine the most highly regarded old masters, each contributing their particular talents towards the whole. Presented with this ideal involving inimitable hands and minds, Francesco Scannelli, Carlo Cesare Malvasia, and Marco Boschini each reflected on the practical conditions and possibilities of
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Citations
Textual Intercourse: Collaboration, Authorship, and Sexualities in Renaissance Drama: reprinted in Reconceiving the Renaissance: a critical reader
Jeffrey Masten,Ewan Fernie +1 more
- 01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss between gentlemen, homoeroticism, collaboration, and the discourse of friendship in Renaissance drama, as well as representing authority: patriarchalism, absolutism and the author on stage.
131
Venice: A Documentary History, 1450-1630
Giulio M. Ongaro,David Chambers,Brian Pullan,Jennifer Fletcher +3 more
- 01 Jan 1993
Abstract: During the Renaissance, there were two centres of art, culture and mercantile power in Italy: Florence, and Venice. This is a sourcebook of primary materials, almost none previously available in English, for the history of the city-state of Venice. The time period covers the apogee of Venetian power and reputation to the beginnings of its decline in the 1630s. Sources used include diaries, chronicles, Inquisitorial records, literature, legislation, and contemporary descriptions, and are organized in sections by theme and accompanied by brief introductions. Originally published by Basil Blackwell, 1992.
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Taking Positions on the Erotic in Renaissance Culture
David O. Frantz,Bette Talvacchia +1 more
- 01 Jan 1999
Abstract: Acknowledgments vii Introduction ix 1 The Historical Situation 3 2 The Style and Material Remains of I modi 21 3 I modi and Their Antique Paradigms 49 4 The Issue of Prints 71 5 Printed in Words: The Verbal Representations of Pietro Aretino 85 6 Terms of Renaissance Discourse about the Erotic: Onesto and Disonesto 101 7 The Retreat of Sexual Representation into Mythology 125 8 Mythology, Sexuality, and Science in Charles Estienne's Manual of Anatomy 161 Appendix A: Texts and Translations 189 Appendix B: I sonetti lussuriosi and Translations 198 Notes 229 Selected Bibliography 279 Index 289
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References
An Enigmatic Venetian Picture at Detroit
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a composite work of Giorgione, Titian, and Sebastiano del Piombo, which they regard as a composite painting of the bottega painting by the master and his best disciples.
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Dipinti tra sguardo e pensiero. Studi attorno a Giorgione, Morazzone e Tiepolo
Alessandro Rossi
- 18 Sep 2013
TL;DR: Rossi as mentioned in this paper divided his Ph.D. thesis into three essays concerning the sixteenth and eighteenth-century Venetian painting (Giorgione and Tiepolo) and the seventeenth-century Lombard painting (Morazzone).
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