Questo sito usa cookie di analytics per raccogliere dati in forma aggregata e cookie di terze parti per migliorare l'esperienza utente.
Leggi l'Informativa Cookie Policy completa.

Libri antichi e moderni

Robert Brennan

Painting as a Modern Art in Early Renaissance Italy

, Brepols - Harvey Miller, 2020,

125,00 €

Erik Tonen Books

(Antwerpen, Bélgica)

Parla con il Libraio

Metodi di Pagamento

Dettagli

Autor
Robert Brennan
Editores
, Brepols - Harvey Miller, 2020
Materia
kunst wetenschappen, Art studies, Art sudies, Art studies

Descrizione

Hardback, 366 pages, Size:220 x 280 mm, Illustrations:11 b/w, 115 col., 1 tables b/w., Language: English. ISBN 9781912554003. Summary Concepts of modernity have played a constitutive role in the canon of European art history at least since Giorgio Vasari, who looked back upon Giotto as the founder of "modern art" (arte moderna). The aim of this book is to establish a prehistory of Vasari's view. Was Vasari merely projecting a sixteenth-century concept of artistic modernity onto the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, or were the artists of that period guided by some notion of modernity as well? Brennan argues that discussions of "modern art" were in fact widespread during Giotto's time, according to the broad, medieval definition of "art" (ars) that encompassed activities as diverse as arithmetic, poetry, carpentry, music, and preaching. Within this discourse, to make an art "modern" meant setting it on a new foundation in "science" (scientia) and rationalizing it accordingly. By the year 1400, Florentine writers such as Cennino Cennini and Franco Sacchetti were applying these same terms and principles to Giotto. In doing so they shed light not only on the structure of artistic development in the fourteenth century, but also on the way Giotto's legacy shaped the prerogatives of artists in the early fifteenth - that is, in the generation of Brunelleschi, Donatello, and Masaccio.
Logo Maremagnum es