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La mostra "Pietro Aretino e l'arte del Rinascimento" è dedicata a un artista, ma innanzitutto a un uomo, vissuto al centro delle cose nel pieno della "Maniera moderna", secondo la definizione di Giorgio Vasari nelle sue 'Vite', pubblicate nel 1550 e nel 1568. Il catalogo, come la mostra, è scandito in cinque sezioni che illustrano i principali momenti della vicenda di Pietro, e l'avvicendarsi di scenari che vanno dagli esordi tra Arezzo e Perugia, all'approdo alla corte pontificia e al trasferimento nel Nord Italia, dapprima a Mantova e, infine, a Venezia. L'iconografia della pubblicazione è particolarmente ricca, le schede di catalogo si avvalgono delle competenze di 50 autori di diversa estrazione.
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sculpting --- bronze [metal] --- Italian Renaissance-Baroque styles
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portraits --- Italian Renaissance-Baroque styles --- Renaissance
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Iconography --- portraits --- Italian Renaissance-Baroque styles --- Giotto
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Of the triumvirate of sixteenth-century Venetian painters, Titian, Veronese, and Tintoretto, Paolo [Caliari] Veronese (1528-1588) best conveyed Venices civic splendor. His masterpieces in the Doges Palace conferred on the Republic a magnificence and authority that was rapidly dwindling by the end of the Renaissance. But on a private level, he also reshaped the fashions of the Serenissima through a steady stream of portrait commissions. Many members of Venices most elite families sat for Veronese, as did notable artists and authors, including Titian and Sir Phillip Sidney. Once regarded as Venices best portraitist, his talents in this genre unfortunately remain largely unknown to modern audiences. This book offers the first comprehensive study of the approximately forty portraits that survive. Shedding new light on early works, such as the pendants of the Da Porto and the frescos of the Barbaro in the Palladian villa at Maser, Professor Garton also examines Paolos images of women within the larger polemics surrounding the anonymous beauties of Giorgione, Palma il Vecchio, and Titian. The author analyzes Veroneses innovations in martial portraiture, melancholic portrayals of artists and nobility, and evocations of the antique. Relevant issues of social history, class insecurity, and poetic convention are all brought to bear in deciphering the meanings of these images and what they reveal about the painter and his clientele. This layered study of Venices golden age of painting ends appropriately with a glance at the moderns who profited most from the study of Veroneses portraits: Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux, Henri Fantin-Latour, Mary Cassatt, and Henri Matisse. A complete catalogue of Veroneses portraits follows the chapters.
portraits --- Italian Renaissance-Baroque styles --- Veronese, Paolo
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