The Art Collector in Early Modern Italy: Andrea Odoni and his Venetian Palace
Autor Monika Schmitteren Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 sep 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781108844086
ISBN-10: 1108844081
Pagini: 340
Dimensiuni: 222 x 287 x 22 mm
Greutate: 1.18 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1108844081
Pagini: 340
Dimensiuni: 222 x 287 x 22 mm
Greutate: 1.18 kg
Editura: Cambridge University Press
Colecția Cambridge University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
1. Venice in transition; 2. Second generation venetian; 3. Odoni's facade; 4. Creating Rome in Venice: the Antigaia; 5. The Portego; 6. The Camere; 7. Transmuting the self: Lotto's Portrait of Odoni.
Recenzii
'Focusing on Lorenzo Lotto's extraordinary Portrait of Andrea Odoni, this book is an engaging art historical detective story. The sitter, Andrea Odoni, is well known to Venetian specialists, largely from his portrait by Lotto and his appearance in the diary of Marcantonio Michiel, but the writer fleshes out this picture with new information yielded by enterprising archival and primary source research. She offers several overlapping portraits: of the Venetian cittadini as a caste, of Odoni himself, of his house and collection of art and antiquities, of the birth of collecting in Venice, and ultimately, of Lotto's hermetic erudition and his extraordinary inventive skills in creating a portrait that is far more than a portrait.' Patricia Fortini Brown, Professor Emeritus, Department of Art and Archaeology, Princeton University
'Lucidly written and meticulously documented, The Art Collector in Early Modern Italy reveals how a case study of an individual can open up new ways of thinking about immigration and social class, the imbrication between objects and the self, and the architectural presence of a home museum in urban space. Monika Schmitter offers us a compelling account of Venetian art and society which will be read, discussed, and enjoyed by a new generation of scholars.' David Kim, Associate Professor of Art History, University of Pennsylvania
'This brilliant book takes us deep into the world of sixteenth-century Venice through the figure of Andrea Odoni, tax collector turned art collector. Marshalling period sources, works of art, and a range of interdisciplinary approaches, Monika Schmitter delves into Odoni's milieu and what made him tick. This persuasive study explores the ways in which Odoni's house and collections were typical of his social class and his time – and the ways in which they were exceptional. Odoni's Venice offers precedents for many of today's notions about collecting, museums, art conservation, and the role of culture to define our identities.' Frederick Ilchman, chair of the Art of Europe at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and chairman of Save Venice
'This excellent book … marks an impressive advance in our understanding of Lotto's portrait, largely because it also provides an unpredecentedly detailed an thoughtful analysis of the sitter, his house and his collection. Along the way these aspects of [Odoni's] personality and self-expression are illuminatingly integrated within a wider consideration of his social position and of the design and decoration of Venetian palaces in the first half of the sixteenth century as well as of strategies of display.' Peter Humfrey, Burlington Magazine
'Lucidly written and meticulously documented, The Art Collector in Early Modern Italy reveals how a case study of an individual can open up new ways of thinking about immigration and social class, the imbrication between objects and the self, and the architectural presence of a home museum in urban space. Monika Schmitter offers us a compelling account of Venetian art and society which will be read, discussed, and enjoyed by a new generation of scholars.' David Kim, Associate Professor of Art History, University of Pennsylvania
'This brilliant book takes us deep into the world of sixteenth-century Venice through the figure of Andrea Odoni, tax collector turned art collector. Marshalling period sources, works of art, and a range of interdisciplinary approaches, Monika Schmitter delves into Odoni's milieu and what made him tick. This persuasive study explores the ways in which Odoni's house and collections were typical of his social class and his time – and the ways in which they were exceptional. Odoni's Venice offers precedents for many of today's notions about collecting, museums, art conservation, and the role of culture to define our identities.' Frederick Ilchman, chair of the Art of Europe at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and chairman of Save Venice
'This excellent book … marks an impressive advance in our understanding of Lotto's portrait, largely because it also provides an unpredecentedly detailed an thoughtful analysis of the sitter, his house and his collection. Along the way these aspects of [Odoni's] personality and self-expression are illuminatingly integrated within a wider consideration of his social position and of the design and decoration of Venetian palaces in the first half of the sixteenth century as well as of strategies of display.' Peter Humfrey, Burlington Magazine
Notă biografică
Descriere
Discusses Andrea Odoni, an unexpected art collector who is portrayed in one of the most famous portraits in Renaissance art.