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Libri antichi e moderni

Diane H. Bodart, Cleo Nisse (Eds)

Titian's Poetics Selected Essays by David Rosand

Harvey Miller Publishers ( Distr.Brepols Publishers ), 2024

225,00 €

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Dettagli

Anno di pubblicazione
2024
ISBN
9781915487360
Luogo di stampa
Turnhout
Autore
Diane H. Bodart, Cleo Nisse (Eds)
Pagine
448
Volumi
1
Editori
Harvey Miller Publishers ( Distr.Brepols Publishers )
Formato
225 X300 mm.
Edizione
prima edizione
Descrizione
nuovo
Descrizione
Rilegato
Stato di conservazione
Nuovo
Lingue
Inglese
Prima edizione

Descrizione

Titian's Poetics Selected Essays by David Rosand Diane H. Bodart, Cleo Nisse (eds) Pages: 448 p. Size:225 x 300 mm Illustrations:27 b/w, 273 col. Language(s):English Publication Year:2024 Buy print version ? 225,00 EXCL. VAT RETAIL PRICE ISBN: 978-1-915487-36-0 Hardback Available Through a careful selection of essays, curated around his primary concerns with "Titian the painter and on the affective structures of his art, his technique and mimetic power, on its poetry," this book reconstitutes the many facets of David Rosand's vision of the artist. SUBJECT(S) Renaissance painting Painters BIO Diane H. Bodart is the David Rosand Associate Professor of Italian Renaissance Art History at Columbia University. Her research focuses on arts theory and practice in Italy and in the territories of imperial Spain in the early modern period. She is the author of Tiziano e Federico II Gonzaga (Rome, 1998) and Pouvoirs du portrait sous les Habsbourg d'Espagne (Paris, 2011), and the co-editor of François Lemée. Traité des statues (Weimar, 2012); Rire en images à la Renaissance (Turnhout, 2018); Wearing Images (2018); Le grand âge et ses ouvres ultimes (Rennes, 2020); Gribouillage. De Léonard de Vinci à Cy Twombly (Paris, 2022). Cleo Nisse is Assistant Professor of Early Modern European Art at the University of Groningen. Her research focuses on artistic practice, how artworks change over time, and the relationship between art history and conservation. She is the author of Unraveling Canvas: Venetian Painting from Bellini to Tintoretto (PhD diss. Columbia University, 2024). She also holds a postgraduate degree in painting conservation from the Courtauld Institute. David Rosand (1938-2014) was the Meyer Schapiro Professor of Art History at Columbia University and served as the chairman of the Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery. Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, he is also a foreign member of the Ateneo Veneto in Venice. An art historian, critic, and advocate for the conservation of cultural heritage, he was a generous and committed teacher. He is best known for his research on the art of Venice through publications including Titian and the Venetian Woodcut; Painting in Sixteenth-Century Venice: Titian, Veronese and Tintoretto; and Myths of Venice: The Figuration of a State. He also published on modern art, notably Robert Motherwell on Paper: Drawings, Prints, Collages. SUMMARY The present volume offers an extensive compendium of the late Professor David Rosand's writings on Titian through a collection of essays published between 1971 and 2014. Throughout his illustrious career at Columbia University, Rosand indefatigably investigated the Venetian artist's pictorial intelligence, and much as the continuous conversation of an enduring friendship creates ever new levels of intimacy and understanding, this lifelong engagement resulted in some of the most convincing interpretations of Titian's artworks penned to date. While his scholarship has been extremely influential on Titian studies, Rosand's most significant texts on the artist are chapters in books with a broader subject or papers disseminated in journals and collective volumes. Through a careful selection of essays, curated around Rosand's primary concerns with "Titian the painter and on the affective structures of his art, his technique and mimetic power, on its poetry," this book reconstitutes the many facets of his vision of the artist. The reader is invited to enjoy this volume both as a means to gain deeper insight into the art of Renaissance Venice, and also the shifting priorities in the field of art history in the second half of the twentieth century, which Rosand himself did much to mold. His ground-breaking interrogation of the relationship between making and meaning in Titian's art remains remarkably fresh and will doubtless continue to offer prompts to future generations of scholars. At the same time, his lively and
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