Jacopo Strada and Cultural Patronage at The Imperial Court (2 Vols.) : The Antique as Innovation: Rulers & Elites, cartea 17
Autor Dirk Jacob Jansenen Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 mar 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004355262
ISBN-10: 900435526X
Pagini: 1070
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 56 mm
Greutate: 2.31 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Rulers & Elites
ISBN-10: 900435526X
Pagini: 1070
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 56 mm
Greutate: 2.31 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Rulers & Elites
Notă biografică
Dirk Jacob Jansen, Ph.D. (Leiden 2015), Gotha Research Centre at the University of Erfurt, has been an academic librarian and curator. His published research focuses on sixteenth-century architecture, antiquarianism and collecting in courtly contexts, and includes several articles on the life and career of Jacopo Strada.
Recenzii
“A beautiful book that will certainly become the definitive biography of this intriguing Italian.”
Howard Louthan, University of Minnesota. In: Renaissance Quarterly, Vol. 74, No. 2 (Summer 2021), pp. 626–628.
“Jansen has successfully demonstrated Strada’s importance in the cultural transfer from Italy to the North. In the process he has assigned him a unique role as an “agent of change” in the cultural history of the second half of the 16th century.”
Sylvia Ferino, Director Emerita of Paintings at the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. In: The Art Newspaper, 13 July 2020.
A “phenomenal performance” […]. “The immense effort with which Jansen deals with many questions makes the book a work worth returning to repeatedly […]. The book under review should not be missing from the library of any scholar interested in 16th-century Central European cultural history.”
Sylva Dobalová & Petr Uličný, Institute of Art History Czech Academy of Sciences. In: Umění/Art: Journal of the Institute of Art History of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Vol. 69, No. 1 (2021), pp. 112–116.
“Das Buch Dirk Jacob Jansens über die schöpferischen Aktivitäten des Architekten und Antiquars Jacopo Strada stellt durch seine Auffassung, heuristische Reichweite und die Erkenntnisse einen grundlegenden wissenschaftlichen Beitrag zur Kulturgeschichte Zentraleuropas im dritten Viertel des 16. Jahrhunderts dar.“
Václav Bůžek, University of South Bohemia in České Budějovice. In: Mitteilungen des Instituts für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung, Vol. 128, No. 2 (2020), pp. 455–457.
Howard Louthan, University of Minnesota. In: Renaissance Quarterly, Vol. 74, No. 2 (Summer 2021), pp. 626–628.
“Jansen has successfully demonstrated Strada’s importance in the cultural transfer from Italy to the North. In the process he has assigned him a unique role as an “agent of change” in the cultural history of the second half of the 16th century.”
Sylvia Ferino, Director Emerita of Paintings at the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. In: The Art Newspaper, 13 July 2020.
A “phenomenal performance” […]. “The immense effort with which Jansen deals with many questions makes the book a work worth returning to repeatedly […]. The book under review should not be missing from the library of any scholar interested in 16th-century Central European cultural history.”
Sylva Dobalová & Petr Uličný, Institute of Art History Czech Academy of Sciences. In: Umění/Art: Journal of the Institute of Art History of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Vol. 69, No. 1 (2021), pp. 112–116.
“Das Buch Dirk Jacob Jansens über die schöpferischen Aktivitäten des Architekten und Antiquars Jacopo Strada stellt durch seine Auffassung, heuristische Reichweite und die Erkenntnisse einen grundlegenden wissenschaftlichen Beitrag zur Kulturgeschichte Zentraleuropas im dritten Viertel des 16. Jahrhunderts dar.“
Václav Bůžek, University of South Bohemia in České Budějovice. In: Mitteilungen des Instituts für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung, Vol. 128, No. 2 (2020), pp. 455–457.
Cuprins
Preface
Introduction | The Image – Or from Whom (Not?)
to Buy a Second-Hand Car
0.1 The portraits of Jacopo and Ottavio Strada
0.2 Why are these portraits so special?
0.3Motions of the mind
0.4 What is known about Strada: early notices
0.5 Quellenkunde: some sources published and interpreted in
the nineteenth century
0.6 Kulturgeschichte before World War II
0.7 Romance: Josef Svaték and the Rudolfine legend
0.8 A (very) modest place in the history of classical scholarship
0.9Contemporary scholarship
0.10 What has not been written about Jacopo Strada
0.11 Weaving the strands together: the purpose of this study
I | ‘A Puero Enutritum et iam Olim Exercitatum’: Education and Early Experience
1 | Early Years: Family Background, Education, Giulio Romano
1.1Family background
1.2 Mantua and the Gonzaga
1.3 Formal education
1.4Artistic training
1.5Giulio’s collections
1.6 Early training as a goldsmith?
1.7 Significance of his Mantuan background for Strada’s development
2 | Travel: Rome, Landshut, Nuremberg and Strada’s
Relationship with Wenzel Jamnitzer
2.1Early travels
2.2 Residence in Germany
2.3 The Landshut hypothesis
2.4Romance in Franconia: Strada’s marriage and his settling in
Nuremberg
2.5Strada and Wenzel Jamnitzer
3 |
In Hans Jakob Fugger’s Service
3.1 Hans Jakob Fugger
3.2 Fugger as a patron and collector
3.3 Fugger’s employment of Strada
3.4Architectural patronage for the Fugger Family: the Donauwörth Studiolo
3.5 Strada’s trips to Lyon
3.6Strada’s contacts in Lyon: Sebastiano Serlio
3.7Civis Romanus: Strada’s sojourn in Rome
3.8Commissions and purchases: the genesis of Strada’s Musaeum
3.9Departure from Rome
4 |‘Antiquario della Sacra Cesarea Maestà’:
Strada’s Tasks at Court
4.1Looking for patronage: Strada’s arrival at the Imperial court
4.2The controversy with Wolfgang Lazius
4.3‘Obwol Ir.Maj. den Strada selbst dier Zeit wol zu geprauchen’:
Strada’s tasks at court
4.4Indirect sources throwing light on Strada’s employment at court
4.5Conclusion
II | ‘Ainem Paumaister bey unnsern Gebewen’:
Jacopo Strada as an Imperial Architect
5 |Jacopo Strada as an Imperial Architect: Background
5.1Introduction: the Austrian Habsburg as patrons of architecture
5.2The Prince as architect: Ferdinand I and Maximilian II as amateurs and patrons of architecture
5.3‘Adeste Musae’: Maximilian’s hunting lodge and garden in the Prater
5.4The Imperial residence: status quo at Strada’s arrival
5.5The architectural infrastructure at the Imperial court: available talent
5.6Strada’s competence as an architect
6 |Strada’s Role in Projects Initiated by Emperor Ferdinand I
6.1The Hofspital
6.2The Tomb of Maximilian I in Innsbruck
6.3Interior decoration
6.4The Tanzhaus
6.5The Stallburg
7 |
An Object Lesson: Strada’s House in Vienna
8 |The Munich Antiquarium
8.1The commission
8.2The design of 1568
8.3The concept
8.4Strada’s project: the drawings
8.5Strada’s project: the building
8.6The interior elevation
8.7The exterior elevation and its models
8.8Conclusion: Strada’s role in the creation of the Antiquarium
9 | The Neugebäude
9.1The tomb of Ferdinand I and Anna in Prague; Licinio’s paintings
in Pressburg
9.2Kaiserebersdorf and Katterburg
9.3Sobriety versus conspicuous consumption
9.4Hans Jakob Fugger’s letter
9.5Description of the complex
9.6The personal involvement of Emperor Maximilian II
9.7Ottoman influence?
9.8Classical sources: Roman Castrametatio and the fortified palace
of Diocletian at Split
9.9Classical sources: monuments of ancient Rome
9.10Contemporary Italian architecture
9.12Strada’s contribution
9.12Conclusion: Strada’s role in the design of the Neugebäude
10 | Other Patrons of Architecture
10.1The courtyard of the Landhaus in Graz
10.2The residence for Archduke Ernest
10.3Other patrons: Vilém z Rožmberka
10.4Jan Šembera Černohorský z Boskovic and Bučovice Castle in Moravia
10.5Christoph von Teuffenbach: the house in Vienna and the castle
at Drnholec
10.6Reichard Strein von Schwarzenau and the Castle at Schwarzenau
10.7Conclusion
III |
The Musaeum
11 |The Musaeum: Strada’s Circle
11.1Strada’s house
11.2High-ranking visitors: Strada’s guest book and Ottavio’s Stammbuch
11.3 ‘Urbanissime Strada’: accessibility of and hospitality in the Musaeum
11.4Intellectual associates
11.5 Strada’s confessional position
11.6Contacts with members of the dynasty
12 | The Musaeum: its Contents
12.1Introduction
12.2Strada’s own descriptions of his Musaeum
12.3Strada’s acquisitions for Duke Albrecht V of Bavaria
12.4Strada’s own cabinet of antiquities
12.5Acquisitions of other materials in Venice
12.6Commissions in Mantua
12.7‘Lustigen Tiecher’: contemporary painting in Strada’s Musaeum
12.8Conclusion
13 Books, Prints and Drawings: The Musaeum as a centre
of visual documentation
13.1Introduction
13.2Strada’s acquisition of drawings
13.3‘Owls to Athens’: some documents relating to Strada’s graphic
collection
13.4The contents of Strada’s collection of print and drawings
13.5Later fate of Strada’s prints and drawings
13.6Drawings preserved in a context linking them to Strada
13.7Strada’s commissions of visual documentation: Antiquity
13.8Strada’s commissions of visual documentation: contemporary
architecture and decoration
13.9Images as source of knowledge
13.10Conclusion
14 ‘Ex Musaeo et Impensis Jacobi Stradae S.C.M. Antiquarius, Civis Romani’: Strada’s Frustrated Ambitions as a Publisher
14.1 Is there life beyond the court?
14.2Strada’s family
14.3Ottavio Strada’s role
14.4The publishing project: Strada ambitions as a publisher
14.5The Musaeum as an editorial office?
14.6Financing the programme
14.7The Index sive catalogus
14.8Strada’s approach of Christophe Plantin
14.9The rupture with Ottavio
14.10Strada’s testamentary disposition
14.1Conclusion: the aftermath
IV The Antiquary and the Agent of Change
15 ‘Le Cose dell’antichità’: Strada as a Student of Antiquity
15.1 Professsion: Antiquarius
15.2 Strada’s qualities as an antiquary
15.3Strada’s method
15.4Strada’s aims
16 Strada & Co: By Appointment to His Majesty the Emperor
16.1Strada as an Imperial antiquary and architect
16.2Strada’s role as an agent
16.3Strada as an independent agent
16.4‘Ex Musaeo Jacobi de Strada’: study, studio, workshop, office,
showroom
16.5Strada’s influence: an agent of change
16.6Conclusion: Strada’s personality
16.7Epilogue: back to the portrait
APPARATUS
1List of abbreviations
2Chronological list of sources
2Appendices
A: Some unpublished letters
B: Strada’s will
C: Strada’s Musaeum: ‘Pleasant paintings’
D: Strada’s Musaeum: The Index sive Catalogus
4Bibliography
5List of illustrations
Index
Introduction | The Image – Or from Whom (Not?)
to Buy a Second-Hand Car
0.1 The portraits of Jacopo and Ottavio Strada
0.2 Why are these portraits so special?
0.3Motions of the mind
0.4 What is known about Strada: early notices
0.5 Quellenkunde: some sources published and interpreted in
the nineteenth century
0.6 Kulturgeschichte before World War II
0.7 Romance: Josef Svaték and the Rudolfine legend
0.8 A (very) modest place in the history of classical scholarship
0.9Contemporary scholarship
0.10 What has not been written about Jacopo Strada
0.11 Weaving the strands together: the purpose of this study
I | ‘A Puero Enutritum et iam Olim Exercitatum’: Education and Early Experience
1 | Early Years: Family Background, Education, Giulio Romano
1.1Family background
1.2 Mantua and the Gonzaga
1.3 Formal education
1.4Artistic training
1.5Giulio’s collections
1.6 Early training as a goldsmith?
1.7 Significance of his Mantuan background for Strada’s development
2 | Travel: Rome, Landshut, Nuremberg and Strada’s
Relationship with Wenzel Jamnitzer
2.1Early travels
2.2 Residence in Germany
2.3 The Landshut hypothesis
2.4Romance in Franconia: Strada’s marriage and his settling in
Nuremberg
2.5Strada and Wenzel Jamnitzer
3 |
In Hans Jakob Fugger’s Service
3.1 Hans Jakob Fugger
3.2 Fugger as a patron and collector
3.3 Fugger’s employment of Strada
3.4Architectural patronage for the Fugger Family: the Donauwörth Studiolo
3.5 Strada’s trips to Lyon
3.6Strada’s contacts in Lyon: Sebastiano Serlio
3.7Civis Romanus: Strada’s sojourn in Rome
3.8Commissions and purchases: the genesis of Strada’s Musaeum
3.9Departure from Rome
4 |‘Antiquario della Sacra Cesarea Maestà’:
Strada’s Tasks at Court
4.1Looking for patronage: Strada’s arrival at the Imperial court
4.2The controversy with Wolfgang Lazius
4.3‘Obwol Ir.Maj. den Strada selbst dier Zeit wol zu geprauchen’:
Strada’s tasks at court
4.4Indirect sources throwing light on Strada’s employment at court
4.5Conclusion
II | ‘Ainem Paumaister bey unnsern Gebewen’:
Jacopo Strada as an Imperial Architect
5 |Jacopo Strada as an Imperial Architect: Background
5.1Introduction: the Austrian Habsburg as patrons of architecture
5.2The Prince as architect: Ferdinand I and Maximilian II as amateurs and patrons of architecture
5.3‘Adeste Musae’: Maximilian’s hunting lodge and garden in the Prater
5.4The Imperial residence: status quo at Strada’s arrival
5.5The architectural infrastructure at the Imperial court: available talent
5.6Strada’s competence as an architect
6 |Strada’s Role in Projects Initiated by Emperor Ferdinand I
6.1The Hofspital
6.2The Tomb of Maximilian I in Innsbruck
6.3Interior decoration
6.4The Tanzhaus
6.5The Stallburg
7 |
An Object Lesson: Strada’s House in Vienna
8 |The Munich Antiquarium
8.1The commission
8.2The design of 1568
8.3The concept
8.4Strada’s project: the drawings
8.5Strada’s project: the building
8.6The interior elevation
8.7The exterior elevation and its models
8.8Conclusion: Strada’s role in the creation of the Antiquarium
9 | The Neugebäude
9.1The tomb of Ferdinand I and Anna in Prague; Licinio’s paintings
in Pressburg
9.2Kaiserebersdorf and Katterburg
9.3Sobriety versus conspicuous consumption
9.4Hans Jakob Fugger’s letter
9.5Description of the complex
9.6The personal involvement of Emperor Maximilian II
9.7Ottoman influence?
9.8Classical sources: Roman Castrametatio and the fortified palace
of Diocletian at Split
9.9Classical sources: monuments of ancient Rome
9.10Contemporary Italian architecture
9.12Strada’s contribution
9.12Conclusion: Strada’s role in the design of the Neugebäude
10 | Other Patrons of Architecture
10.1The courtyard of the Landhaus in Graz
10.2The residence for Archduke Ernest
10.3Other patrons: Vilém z Rožmberka
10.4Jan Šembera Černohorský z Boskovic and Bučovice Castle in Moravia
10.5Christoph von Teuffenbach: the house in Vienna and the castle
at Drnholec
10.6Reichard Strein von Schwarzenau and the Castle at Schwarzenau
10.7Conclusion
III |
The Musaeum
11 |The Musaeum: Strada’s Circle
11.1Strada’s house
11.2High-ranking visitors: Strada’s guest book and Ottavio’s Stammbuch
11.3 ‘Urbanissime Strada’: accessibility of and hospitality in the Musaeum
11.4Intellectual associates
11.5 Strada’s confessional position
11.6Contacts with members of the dynasty
12 | The Musaeum: its Contents
12.1Introduction
12.2Strada’s own descriptions of his Musaeum
12.3Strada’s acquisitions for Duke Albrecht V of Bavaria
12.4Strada’s own cabinet of antiquities
12.5Acquisitions of other materials in Venice
12.6Commissions in Mantua
12.7‘Lustigen Tiecher’: contemporary painting in Strada’s Musaeum
12.8Conclusion
13 Books, Prints and Drawings: The Musaeum as a centre
of visual documentation
13.1Introduction
13.2Strada’s acquisition of drawings
13.3‘Owls to Athens’: some documents relating to Strada’s graphic
collection
13.4The contents of Strada’s collection of print and drawings
13.5Later fate of Strada’s prints and drawings
13.6Drawings preserved in a context linking them to Strada
13.7Strada’s commissions of visual documentation: Antiquity
13.8Strada’s commissions of visual documentation: contemporary
architecture and decoration
13.9Images as source of knowledge
13.10Conclusion
14 ‘Ex Musaeo et Impensis Jacobi Stradae S.C.M. Antiquarius, Civis Romani’: Strada’s Frustrated Ambitions as a Publisher
14.1 Is there life beyond the court?
14.2Strada’s family
14.3Ottavio Strada’s role
14.4The publishing project: Strada ambitions as a publisher
14.5The Musaeum as an editorial office?
14.6Financing the programme
14.7The Index sive catalogus
14.8Strada’s approach of Christophe Plantin
14.9The rupture with Ottavio
14.10Strada’s testamentary disposition
14.1Conclusion: the aftermath
IV The Antiquary and the Agent of Change
15 ‘Le Cose dell’antichità’: Strada as a Student of Antiquity
15.1 Professsion: Antiquarius
15.2 Strada’s qualities as an antiquary
15.3Strada’s method
15.4Strada’s aims
16 Strada & Co: By Appointment to His Majesty the Emperor
16.1Strada as an Imperial antiquary and architect
16.2Strada’s role as an agent
16.3Strada as an independent agent
16.4‘Ex Musaeo Jacobi de Strada’: study, studio, workshop, office,
showroom
16.5Strada’s influence: an agent of change
16.6Conclusion: Strada’s personality
16.7Epilogue: back to the portrait
APPARATUS
1List of abbreviations
2Chronological list of sources
2Appendices
A: Some unpublished letters
B: Strada’s will
C: Strada’s Musaeum: ‘Pleasant paintings’
D: Strada’s Musaeum: The Index sive Catalogus
4Bibliography
5List of illustrations
Index