Synagonism: Theory and Practice in Early Modern Art
Yannis Hadjinicolaou, Joris van Gastel, Markus Rathen Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 apr 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004686700
ISBN-10: 9004686703
Pagini: 500
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
ISBN-10: 9004686703
Pagini: 500
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Notă biografică
Yannis Hadjinicolaou, PD Dr (2023), University of Hamburg, is Akademischer Rat a.Z at the Institute of Art History, University of Bonn. He has published the monograph Thinking Bodies – Shaping Hands, Handeling in Art and Theory of the Late Rembrandtists (2019) as well as five edited volumes and articles on art and art theory of the early modern period, the political iconography of falconry and the theory and history of art history. His forthcoming book is entitled The Art of Medieval Falconry (2024).
Joris van Gastel, PD Dr (2022), University of Zurich, is assistant professor at the Institute of Art History in Zurich. He has published widely on early modern art, with a particular focus on Roman baroque sculpture and the art of Southern Italy, and is co-editor of the collected works of Heinrich Wölfflin. His book on materiality and identity in baroque Naples is forthcoming.
Markus Rath, PhD (2016), Humboldt-University of Berlin, Assistant Professor of Art and Knowledge in the Early Modern Period at the University of Trier. He was previously a research assistant at the HU Berlin, at the German Centre for Art History in Paris and at the University of Basel. His dissertation examined movable sculpture (Die Gliederpuppe. Kult – Kunst – Konzept, Berlin/Boston 2016). Current research focuses on abstraction and expressivity in the early modern period as well as metaphorology, materiality and mediality in pre-modern art and science.
Joris van Gastel, PD Dr (2022), University of Zurich, is assistant professor at the Institute of Art History in Zurich. He has published widely on early modern art, with a particular focus on Roman baroque sculpture and the art of Southern Italy, and is co-editor of the collected works of Heinrich Wölfflin. His book on materiality and identity in baroque Naples is forthcoming.
Markus Rath, PhD (2016), Humboldt-University of Berlin, Assistant Professor of Art and Knowledge in the Early Modern Period at the University of Trier. He was previously a research assistant at the HU Berlin, at the German Centre for Art History in Paris and at the University of Basel. His dissertation examined movable sculpture (Die Gliederpuppe. Kult – Kunst – Konzept, Berlin/Boston 2016). Current research focuses on abstraction and expressivity in the early modern period as well as metaphorology, materiality and mediality in pre-modern art and science.
Cuprins
List of Figures
Notes on Contributors
Synagonism: An Introduction
Yannis Hadjinicolaou, Joris van Gastel, and Markus Rath
1 El Greco’s Synagonism
Yannis Hadjinicolaou
2 Touch and Trace: Clay in the Hands of the Baroque Sculptor
Joris van Gastel
3 Raphael’s Mond Crucifixion and the Lesson of Santa Maria Novella
Franz Engel
4 Normatively Conditioned Synagonism: Competition and Collaboration, Specialization and Quality Enhancement in the Context of Guild Monopolies on Painting
Danica Brenner
5 A Soul for a Bridge: On the History of Architectural Collaborations with the Devil
Jasmin Mersmann
6 The Burden of Success in Quattrocento Sculpture: Lorenzo Ghiberti, Mino da Fiesole, Donatello
Fabian Jonietz
7 Sound Spaces: Visualizations of Religious Music in Caravaggio
Isabella Augart
8 Beyond the Paragone: Andrea del Sarto’s Color-Reduced Fresco Cycle in the Chiostro Dello Scalzo in Florence Considered as a Case Study of Synagonism
Helen Boeßenecker
9 Medial Diffference and Medial Synthesis in the Winged Altarpiece: The Oscillating Play of Artforms and the Range of Human Vision
Sandra Hindriks
10 Hands at Work: The Stone Cutter and the Artist
Maurice Saß
11 Renaissance Architectural Culture and Geological Inquiry
Elizabeth Petcu
12 Synagonism in Stone
Markus Rath
Index
Notes on Contributors
Synagonism: An Introduction
Yannis Hadjinicolaou, Joris van Gastel, and Markus Rath
PART 1: Theory and Practice
1 El Greco’s Synagonism
Yannis Hadjinicolaou
2 Touch and Trace: Clay in the Hands of the Baroque Sculptor
Joris van Gastel
3 Raphael’s Mond Crucifixion and the Lesson of Santa Maria Novella
Franz Engel
PART 2: Collaborations
4 Normatively Conditioned Synagonism: Competition and Collaboration, Specialization and Quality Enhancement in the Context of Guild Monopolies on Painting
Danica Brenner
5 A Soul for a Bridge: On the History of Architectural Collaborations with the Devil
Jasmin Mersmann
6 The Burden of Success in Quattrocento Sculpture: Lorenzo Ghiberti, Mino da Fiesole, Donatello
Fabian Jonietz
PART 3: Intermedialities
7 Sound Spaces: Visualizations of Religious Music in Caravaggio
Isabella Augart
8 Beyond the Paragone: Andrea del Sarto’s Color-Reduced Fresco Cycle in the Chiostro Dello Scalzo in Florence Considered as a Case Study of Synagonism
Helen Boeßenecker
9 Medial Diffference and Medial Synthesis in the Winged Altarpiece: The Oscillating Play of Artforms and the Range of Human Vision
Sandra Hindriks
PART 4: Nature and Art
10 Hands at Work: The Stone Cutter and the Artist
Maurice Saß
11 Renaissance Architectural Culture and Geological Inquiry
Elizabeth Petcu
12 Synagonism in Stone
Markus Rath
Index