Painting for Profit: The Economic Lives of Seventeenth-Century Italian Painters by Richard E. Spear
In this highly original book five leading art historians team up with two distinguished economic and social historians to investigate the financial worlds of painters in Baroque Italy. Exploring the many variables that determined the prices asked or received by painters-including the status of their patrons, the size of works and time spent making them, their subject matter, and their number of figures-the authors offer major insights into the social lives, psychological disposition, and economic circumstances of a wide range of major and minor artists.