Antiquity and its Interpreters
Herausgeber: Kuttner, Ann; Smick, Rebekah; Payne, Alina
Antiquity and its Interpreters
Herausgeber: Kuttner, Ann; Smick, Rebekah; Payne, Alina
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Antiquity and its Interpreters examines how the ancient Romans were viewed by early modern Italians.
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Antiquity and its Interpreters examines how the ancient Romans were viewed by early modern Italians.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 342
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 286mm x 221mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 1124g
- ISBN-13: 9780521594004
- ISBN-10: 0521594006
- Artikelnr.: 21807598
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 342
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 286mm x 221mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 1124g
- ISBN-13: 9780521594004
- ISBN-10: 0521594006
- Artikelnr.: 21807598
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Introduction; Part I. Inhabiting History: 1. Historical self-definition;
1.1 Imitation James Ackerman; 1.2 P. Petrarch and the broken city David
Galbraith; 1.3 Acquiring a classical past: historical appropriation in
Renaissance Venice Patricia Fortini Brown; 1.4 Ordering history and style:
Georgio Vasari on the art of history Philip Sohm; 2. Historical
continuities; 2.1 Renaissance and real estate: the medieval afterlife of
the Temple of Diana in Nimes Sheila Bonde; 2.2 Imaginary architecture and
antiquity: the fountain of Venus in Francesco Colonna's Hypnerotomachia
Poliphili Martine Furno II; 2.3 Antiquity consumed: transformations at San
Marco, Venice Marina Belozerskaya and Kenneth Lapatin; Part II. Cultural
Pursued: 3. The heritage of Zeuxis: painting, rhetoric and history Leonard
Barkan; 3.1 Mind's passion: conjugating rationality and sensuality in
neo-platonic interpretations of Italian Renaissance art Julia Branna
Perlman; 3.2 The transformation of ancient landscape through the ideology
of Christian reform Nicola Courtright; 4. The (re)emergence of the
aesthetic; 4.1 Ut poesis architectura: Gherardo Spini and Italian
archietectural criticism circa 1570 Alina Payne; 4.2 Viewing the art of
Michelangelo: visual metaphor in the art critical tradition of the
Renaissance Rebekah Smick; 4.3 The body and antiquity in Alberti's art
theoretical writings Gerhard Wolf; 4.4 Patterns of transumption in
Renaissance architectural theory Christof Thoenes; Part III. Culture
Produced: 5. Textual exegesis; 5.1 Pliny's laocoon? Michael Koortbojian;
5.2 Symmetry and eurythmy: classical theory in architecture from Vitruvius
to Bernini to the present day Tod Marder; 6. Appropriation contexts: decor,
Furor Bacchicus, Convivium Phyllis Pray Bober; 6.1 Si come dice Vetruvio:
images of antiquity in early Renaissance theory of architecture Richard
Betts; Part IV. Coda: 7. Antiquity and the Renaissance from the outside;
7.1 Remaking antiquity in eighteenth-century Seville Catherine Wilkinson
Zerner; 7.2 Winckelmann and Warburg: contrasting attitutudes toward the
instrumental authority of ancient art Richard Brilliant; 7.3 Figural
speculations Michael Ann Holly; 7.4 Writing history, viewing art: the
question of the humanist's eye Carl Goldstein.
1.1 Imitation James Ackerman; 1.2 P. Petrarch and the broken city David
Galbraith; 1.3 Acquiring a classical past: historical appropriation in
Renaissance Venice Patricia Fortini Brown; 1.4 Ordering history and style:
Georgio Vasari on the art of history Philip Sohm; 2. Historical
continuities; 2.1 Renaissance and real estate: the medieval afterlife of
the Temple of Diana in Nimes Sheila Bonde; 2.2 Imaginary architecture and
antiquity: the fountain of Venus in Francesco Colonna's Hypnerotomachia
Poliphili Martine Furno II; 2.3 Antiquity consumed: transformations at San
Marco, Venice Marina Belozerskaya and Kenneth Lapatin; Part II. Cultural
Pursued: 3. The heritage of Zeuxis: painting, rhetoric and history Leonard
Barkan; 3.1 Mind's passion: conjugating rationality and sensuality in
neo-platonic interpretations of Italian Renaissance art Julia Branna
Perlman; 3.2 The transformation of ancient landscape through the ideology
of Christian reform Nicola Courtright; 4. The (re)emergence of the
aesthetic; 4.1 Ut poesis architectura: Gherardo Spini and Italian
archietectural criticism circa 1570 Alina Payne; 4.2 Viewing the art of
Michelangelo: visual metaphor in the art critical tradition of the
Renaissance Rebekah Smick; 4.3 The body and antiquity in Alberti's art
theoretical writings Gerhard Wolf; 4.4 Patterns of transumption in
Renaissance architectural theory Christof Thoenes; Part III. Culture
Produced: 5. Textual exegesis; 5.1 Pliny's laocoon? Michael Koortbojian;
5.2 Symmetry and eurythmy: classical theory in architecture from Vitruvius
to Bernini to the present day Tod Marder; 6. Appropriation contexts: decor,
Furor Bacchicus, Convivium Phyllis Pray Bober; 6.1 Si come dice Vetruvio:
images of antiquity in early Renaissance theory of architecture Richard
Betts; Part IV. Coda: 7. Antiquity and the Renaissance from the outside;
7.1 Remaking antiquity in eighteenth-century Seville Catherine Wilkinson
Zerner; 7.2 Winckelmann and Warburg: contrasting attitutudes toward the
instrumental authority of ancient art Richard Brilliant; 7.3 Figural
speculations Michael Ann Holly; 7.4 Writing history, viewing art: the
question of the humanist's eye Carl Goldstein.
Introduction; Part I. Inhabiting History: 1. Historical self-definition;
1.1 Imitation James Ackerman; 1.2 P. Petrarch and the broken city David
Galbraith; 1.3 Acquiring a classical past: historical appropriation in
Renaissance Venice Patricia Fortini Brown; 1.4 Ordering history and style:
Georgio Vasari on the art of history Philip Sohm; 2. Historical
continuities; 2.1 Renaissance and real estate: the medieval afterlife of
the Temple of Diana in Nimes Sheila Bonde; 2.2 Imaginary architecture and
antiquity: the fountain of Venus in Francesco Colonna's Hypnerotomachia
Poliphili Martine Furno II; 2.3 Antiquity consumed: transformations at San
Marco, Venice Marina Belozerskaya and Kenneth Lapatin; Part II. Cultural
Pursued: 3. The heritage of Zeuxis: painting, rhetoric and history Leonard
Barkan; 3.1 Mind's passion: conjugating rationality and sensuality in
neo-platonic interpretations of Italian Renaissance art Julia Branna
Perlman; 3.2 The transformation of ancient landscape through the ideology
of Christian reform Nicola Courtright; 4. The (re)emergence of the
aesthetic; 4.1 Ut poesis architectura: Gherardo Spini and Italian
archietectural criticism circa 1570 Alina Payne; 4.2 Viewing the art of
Michelangelo: visual metaphor in the art critical tradition of the
Renaissance Rebekah Smick; 4.3 The body and antiquity in Alberti's art
theoretical writings Gerhard Wolf; 4.4 Patterns of transumption in
Renaissance architectural theory Christof Thoenes; Part III. Culture
Produced: 5. Textual exegesis; 5.1 Pliny's laocoon? Michael Koortbojian;
5.2 Symmetry and eurythmy: classical theory in architecture from Vitruvius
to Bernini to the present day Tod Marder; 6. Appropriation contexts: decor,
Furor Bacchicus, Convivium Phyllis Pray Bober; 6.1 Si come dice Vetruvio:
images of antiquity in early Renaissance theory of architecture Richard
Betts; Part IV. Coda: 7. Antiquity and the Renaissance from the outside;
7.1 Remaking antiquity in eighteenth-century Seville Catherine Wilkinson
Zerner; 7.2 Winckelmann and Warburg: contrasting attitutudes toward the
instrumental authority of ancient art Richard Brilliant; 7.3 Figural
speculations Michael Ann Holly; 7.4 Writing history, viewing art: the
question of the humanist's eye Carl Goldstein.
1.1 Imitation James Ackerman; 1.2 P. Petrarch and the broken city David
Galbraith; 1.3 Acquiring a classical past: historical appropriation in
Renaissance Venice Patricia Fortini Brown; 1.4 Ordering history and style:
Georgio Vasari on the art of history Philip Sohm; 2. Historical
continuities; 2.1 Renaissance and real estate: the medieval afterlife of
the Temple of Diana in Nimes Sheila Bonde; 2.2 Imaginary architecture and
antiquity: the fountain of Venus in Francesco Colonna's Hypnerotomachia
Poliphili Martine Furno II; 2.3 Antiquity consumed: transformations at San
Marco, Venice Marina Belozerskaya and Kenneth Lapatin; Part II. Cultural
Pursued: 3. The heritage of Zeuxis: painting, rhetoric and history Leonard
Barkan; 3.1 Mind's passion: conjugating rationality and sensuality in
neo-platonic interpretations of Italian Renaissance art Julia Branna
Perlman; 3.2 The transformation of ancient landscape through the ideology
of Christian reform Nicola Courtright; 4. The (re)emergence of the
aesthetic; 4.1 Ut poesis architectura: Gherardo Spini and Italian
archietectural criticism circa 1570 Alina Payne; 4.2 Viewing the art of
Michelangelo: visual metaphor in the art critical tradition of the
Renaissance Rebekah Smick; 4.3 The body and antiquity in Alberti's art
theoretical writings Gerhard Wolf; 4.4 Patterns of transumption in
Renaissance architectural theory Christof Thoenes; Part III. Culture
Produced: 5. Textual exegesis; 5.1 Pliny's laocoon? Michael Koortbojian;
5.2 Symmetry and eurythmy: classical theory in architecture from Vitruvius
to Bernini to the present day Tod Marder; 6. Appropriation contexts: decor,
Furor Bacchicus, Convivium Phyllis Pray Bober; 6.1 Si come dice Vetruvio:
images of antiquity in early Renaissance theory of architecture Richard
Betts; Part IV. Coda: 7. Antiquity and the Renaissance from the outside;
7.1 Remaking antiquity in eighteenth-century Seville Catherine Wilkinson
Zerner; 7.2 Winckelmann and Warburg: contrasting attitutudes toward the
instrumental authority of ancient art Richard Brilliant; 7.3 Figural
speculations Michael Ann Holly; 7.4 Writing history, viewing art: the
question of the humanist's eye Carl Goldstein.