Andrea del Castagno and the limits of painting / Anne Dunlop, Monographie imprimée

Main Author: Dunlop, Anne, AuteurLanguage: anglais.Country: GrandeBretagne, Belgique.Publication : London, Turnhout : Harvey Miller Publishers, cop. 2015Description: 1 vol. (187 p.) : ill. en noir et en coul., jaquette ill. en coul. ; 29 cmISBN: 978-1-909400-18-4; 1-909400-18-1.Series: Renovatio Artium, Studies in the Arts of the Renaissance, 1Dewey: 759.5, 23Abstract: The Florentine painter Andrea del Castagno (c. 1419-1457) was a central figure of the Italian Renaissance, and his work appears in every major survey textbook on the period. Giorgio Vasari described him a master of drawing and a constant innovator. Vasari also however claimed that Andrea was a cold-blooded assassin, a man who left a self-portrait as Judas and who had murdered a fellow painter to obtain the secret of painting in oil. When Andrea del Castagno drew, he drew blood.0The story is untrue; the few documents on the artist suggest an uneventful life and a very successful short career. Yet Vasari’s tale is suggestive, and it serves as the starting point of this book, the first monograph study of Andrea del Castagno in more than three decades. Many of the painter's visual experiments were artistic dead-ends, seldom or never repeated, and they reveal the limits of a whole emerging visual system. This is painting that struggles to update old schemata for new antiquarian concerns and a new artistic order; natural, supernatural, and imaginary phenomena are all uneasily subject to the same norms of depiction and the same totalizing visibility. In a series of close analyses of key works, this book argues that Andrea del Castagno's art of creative disruption lays bare the problems and paradigms of early Western art. It is a limit case at the moment when the idea of art was itself coming into being.Bibliography: Bibliogr. p. 163-181. Notes bibliogr. Index.Subject - Personal Name: Andrea del Castagno, 1417?-1457 Critique et interprétation Subject - Topical Name: Peinture de la Renaissance Italie
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5ème étage : Arts
Art - Histoire de l'Art 709.23 Andrea del Castagno DUN (Browse shelf (Opens below)) Available 0379827165
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Bibliogr. p. 163-181. Notes bibliogr. Index

The Florentine painter Andrea del Castagno (c. 1419-1457) was a central figure of the Italian Renaissance, and his work appears in every major survey textbook on the period. Giorgio Vasari described him a master of drawing and a constant innovator. Vasari also however claimed that Andrea was a cold-blooded assassin, a man who left a self-portrait as Judas and who had murdered a fellow painter to obtain the secret of painting in oil. When Andrea del Castagno drew, he drew blood.0The story is untrue; the few documents on the artist suggest an uneventful life and a very successful short career. Yet Vasari’s tale is suggestive, and it serves as the starting point of this book, the first monograph study of Andrea del Castagno in more than three decades. Many of the painter's visual experiments were artistic dead-ends, seldom or never repeated, and they reveal the limits of a whole emerging visual system. This is painting that struggles to update old schemata for new antiquarian concerns and a new artistic order; natural, supernatural, and imaginary phenomena are all uneasily subject to the same norms of depiction and the same totalizing visibility. In a series of close analyses of key works, this book argues that Andrea del Castagno's art of creative disruption lays bare the problems and paradigms of early Western art. It is a limit case at the moment when the idea of art was itself coming into being

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