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Public Painting and Visual Culture in Early Republican Florence George Bent (Washington and Lee University, Virginia)

Public Painting and Visual Culture in Early Republican Florence By George Bent (Washington and Lee University, Virginia)

Public Painting and Visual Culture in Early Republican Florence by George Bent (Washington and Lee University, Virginia)


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Summary

This book reconstructs and interprets the decorative appearance of one of the world's greatest cities at the dawn of its golden age. For scholarly and general audiences, it focuses on the needs and interests of common people as a way of thinking about art within the broader context of history.

Public Painting and Visual Culture in Early Republican Florence Summary

Public Painting and Visual Culture in Early Republican Florence by George Bent (Washington and Lee University, Virginia)

Street corners, guild halls, government offices, and confraternity centers contained paintings that made the city of Florence a visual jewel at precisely the time of its emergence as an international cultural leader. This book considers the paintings that were made specifically for consideration by lay viewers, as well as the way they could have been interpreted by audiences who approached them with specific perspectives. Their belief in the power of images, their understanding of the persuasiveness of pictures, and their acceptance of the utterly vital role that art could play as a propagator of civic, corporate, and individual identity made lay viewers keenly aware of the paintings in their midst. Those pictures affirmed the piety of the people for whom they were made in an age of social and political upheaval, as the city experimented with an imperfect form of republicanism that often failed to adhere to its declared aspirations.

Public Painting and Visual Culture in Early Republican Florence Reviews

'We learn, here, not only of works of art, but of the people of the Florentine Republic - of condemned criminals, prostitutes, merchants, government officials, guild members from the Arte della Lana and the Arte dei Giudici e Notai, laudesi, plague victims, the bishop and his entourage, the families of the newly baptized, and the would-be tyrant - and of how these and others lived lives shaped by images in an urban environment before the era of art.' Jonathan Kline, Renaissance Quarterly

About George Bent (Washington and Lee University, Virginia)

George R. Bent is the Sydney Gause Childress Professor of the Arts at Washington and Lee University, Virginia, where he has taught in the Department of Art and Art History since 1993. A Fulbright scholar, Bent has written about the art of Lorenzo Monaco, Florentine art of the Late Middle Ages and Early Renaissance, and manuscript production in the fourteenth century.

Table of Contents

Introduction: public painting for common people in early republican Florence, 12821434; 1. Paintings in the streets: tabernacles, public devotion, and control; 2. Images of charity: confraternities, hospitals, and pictures for the destitute; 3. Art and the commune: politics, propaganda, and the bureaucratic state; 4. Pictures for merchants: the guilds, their paintings, and the struggle for power; 5. Public painting in sacred spaces: piers and pilasters in Florentine churches; 6. Murals for the masses: paintings on nave walls; 7. Masaccio's Trinity and the triumph of public painting for common people in early republican Florence.

Additional information

NPB9781107139763
9781107139763
1107139767
Public Painting and Visual Culture in Early Republican Florence by George Bent (Washington and Lee University, Virginia)
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2017-01-16
352
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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