Inventing the Renaissance Putto - Bettie Allison Rand Lectures in Art History - Charles Dempsey - Books - The University of North Carolina Press - 9781469628400 - August 20, 2015
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Inventing the Renaissance Putto - Bettie Allison Rand Lectures in Art History

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Commendation Quotes: Drawing inventively on a rich body of scholarship, "Inventing the Renaissance Putto" by Charles Dempsey uses these findings as a point of departure for a fresh and remarkable study. . . . [Dempsey] offers superb 'readings' of Botticelli's 'Mars and Venus' and of Poliziano's wonderful poem, 'Stanzas for Giuliano de'Medici's Joust.'--"Times Litererary Supplement" Commendation Quotes: A work of scholarship outstanding for its originality in approach, soundness of research, and depth of insight and interpretation. Anyone reading this book, whether specialist or common reader, will view the art of Donatello, Botticelli, and Michelangelo in a new light and with greater understanding.--Hellmut Wohl, author of "The Aesthetics of Italian Renaissance Art: A Reconsideration of Style" Commendation Quotes: A series of erudite iconographic essays, which draw deeply from the studies of poetry, festivals, psychology, and medicine.--"Renaissance Quarterly" Review Quotes: Drawing inventively on a rich body of scholarship, "Inventing the Renaissance Putto" by Charles Dempsey uses these findings as a point of departure for a fresh and remarkable study. ("TLS") Review Quotes: A work of scholarship outstanding for its originality in approach, soundness of research, and depth of insight and interpretation. (Hellmut Wohl, author of "The Aesthetics of Italian Renaissance Art: A Reconsideration of Style") Commendation Quotes: An intriguing exploration. . . . Dempsey looks at classical texts, renaissance reinterpretations of them . . . and at a whole host of other images, and allows us to see them with new eyes.--"Apollo: International Magazine of the Arts" Publisher Marketing: The figure of the putto (often portrayed as a mischievous baby) made frequent appearances in the art and literature of Renaissance Italy. Commonly called "spiritelli," or sprites, putti embodied a minor species of demon, in their nature neither good nor bad. They included natural spirits, animal spirits, and the spirits of sight and sound, as well as hobgoblin fantasies, bogeys, and the spirits contained in wine. Among the sensations ascribed to "spiritelli" were feelings of love, erotic arousal, and startling frights. After discussing the many manifestations of the putto-"spiritello" in fifteenth-century Italian art and literature, Charles Dempsey offers parallel interpretations of two works: Botticelli's "Mars and Venus," a painting in which infant Satyr-putti appear as the panic-inducing spirits of the nightmare, and Politian's "Stanze," a poem in which masked cupids appear to the hero in a deceiving dream. He concludes with an examination of the function of such masks in the poetry and public masquerades sponsored by Lorenzo de'Medici and in Michelangelo's scheme for the decoration of the Medici Chapel. Throughout, Dempsey advances a larger argument about the nature of Italian Renaissance art. Rather than simply reviving classical forms, he says, the art accommodated and fused them within local, vernacular, and modern Italian traditions, both literary and pictorial. Contributor Bio:  Dempsey, Charles Charles Dempsey is Professor of Italian Renaissance and Baroque Art at The Johns Hopkins University.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released August 20, 2015
Original release date 2016
ISBN13 9781469628400
Publishers The University of North Carolina Press
Genre Chronological Period > 16th Century
Pages 312
Dimensions 155 × 235 × 18 mm   ·   471 g
Language English  

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