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The traveling artist in the Italian Renaissance: geography, mobility, and style

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This important and innovative book examines artists’ mobility as a critical aspect of Italian Renaissance art. It is well known that many eminent artists such as Cimabue, Giotto, Donatello, Lotto, Michelangelo, Raphael, and Titian traveled. This book is the first to consider the sixteenth-century literary descriptions of their journeys in relation to the larger Renaissance discourse concerning mobility, geography, the act of creation, and selfhood.
 
David Young Kim carefully explores relevant themes in Giorgio Vasari’s monumentalLives of the Artists, in particular how style was understood to register an artist’s encounter with place. Through new readings of critical ideas, long-standing regional prejudices, and entire biographies,The Traveling Artist in the Italian Renaissanceprovides a groundbreaking case for the significance of mobility in the interpretation of art and the wider discipline of art history.

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£45.00
Product Details
Yale University Press
0300212240 / 9780300212242
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
23/12/2014
English
294 pages
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