Botticelli, Holbein, Leonardo, DÃ rer, Michelangelo: the names are familiar, as are many of the works. But who were these artists, why did they produce such memorable images, and how would their original beholders have viewed these objects? This book answers such questions by considering both famous and lesser-known artists, patrons, and works of art from the period.
Botticelli, Holbein, Leonardo, DÃ rer, Michelangelo: the names are familiar, as are many of the works. But who were these artists, why did they produce such memorable images, and how would their original beholders have viewed these objects? This book answers such questions by considering both famous and lesser-known artists, patrons, and works of art from the period.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Geraldine A. Johnson is University Lecturer in History of Art at the University of Oxford, and a fellow of Christ Church, Oxford. She received her Ph.D. from Harvard University. Her publications range from studies of Italian Renaissance art to considerations of contemporary American sculpture, and from women patrons in Early Modern Europe to the history of photography. Her work has appeared in important journals such as The Burlington Magazine, The Art Bulletin, Art History, and Renaissance Quarterly. In 1997, Cambridge University Press published a prize-winning essay collection she co-edited titled Picturing Women in Renaissance and Baroque Italy. The same press also published another volume she edited in 1998 titled Sculpture and Photography: Envisioning the Third Dimension. At present, she is completing a book on the tactile and visual reception of sculpture in Early Modern Italy.
Inhaltsangabe
1: Whose Renaissance? Whose art? 2: The art of the altarpiece 3: Story-telling in Renaissance Art 4: The challenge of nature and the antique 5: Portraiture and the rise of 'Renaissance Man' 6: The story of a square 7: Objects and images for the domestic sphere 8: Did women have a Renaissance? 9: Michelangelo and the birth of the Artist...and of Art History
1: Whose Renaissance? Whose art? 2: The art of the altarpiece 3: Story-telling in Renaissance Art 4: The challenge of nature and the antique 5: Portraiture and the rise of 'Renaissance Man' 6: The story of a square 7: Objects and images for the domestic sphere 8: Did women have a Renaissance? 9: Michelangelo and the birth of the Artist...and of Art History
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