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Creating the  Divine  Artist: From Dante to Michelangelo
Hardback

Creating the Divine Artist: From Dante to Michelangelo

$578.99
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Turning a skeptical eye on the idea that Renaissance artists were widely believed to be as utterly admirable as Vasari claimed, this book re-opens the question of why artists were praised and by whom, and specifically why the language of divinity was invoked, a practice the ancients did not license. The epithet “divino” is examined in the context of claims to liberal arts status and to analogy with poets, musicians, and other “uomini famossi.” The reputations of Michelangelo and Brunelleschi are compared not only with each other but with those of Dante and Ariosto, of Aretino and of the ubiquitous beloved of the sonnet tradition. Nineteenth-century reformulations of the idea of Renaissance artistic divinity are treated in the epilogue, and twentieth-century treatments of the idea of artistic ingegno in an appendix.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Brill
Country
NL
Date
26 March 2004
Pages
454
ISBN
9789004137097

Turning a skeptical eye on the idea that Renaissance artists were widely believed to be as utterly admirable as Vasari claimed, this book re-opens the question of why artists were praised and by whom, and specifically why the language of divinity was invoked, a practice the ancients did not license. The epithet “divino” is examined in the context of claims to liberal arts status and to analogy with poets, musicians, and other “uomini famossi.” The reputations of Michelangelo and Brunelleschi are compared not only with each other but with those of Dante and Ariosto, of Aretino and of the ubiquitous beloved of the sonnet tradition. Nineteenth-century reformulations of the idea of Renaissance artistic divinity are treated in the epilogue, and twentieth-century treatments of the idea of artistic ingegno in an appendix.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Brill
Country
NL
Date
26 March 2004
Pages
454
ISBN
9789004137097