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Art and Violence in Early Renaissance Florence

Full title: Art and Violence in Early Renaissance Florence
ISBN: 9780300233513
ISBN 10: 0300233515
Authors: Nethersole, Scott
Publisher: Yale University Press
Edition: 1
Num. pages: 320
Binding: Hardcover
Language: en
Published on: 2018

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Synopsis

This Study Is The First To Examine The Relationship Between Art And Violence In 15th-century Florence, Exposing The Underbelly Of A Period More Often Celebrated For Enlightened And Progressive Ideas. Renaissance Florentines Were Constantly Subjected To The Sight Of Violence, Whether In Carefully Staged Rituals Of Execution Or Images Of The Suffering Inflicted On Christ. There Was Nothing New In This Culture Of Pain, Unlike The Aesthetic Of Violence That Developed Towards The End Of The 15th Century. It Emerged In The Work Of Artists Such As Piero Di Cosimo, Bertoldo Di Giovanni, Antonio Del Pollaiuolo, And The Young Michelangelo. Inspired By The Art Of Antiquity, They Painted, Engraved, And Sculpted Images Of Deadly Battles, Ultimately Normalizing Representations Of Brutal Violence. Drawing On Work In Social And Literary History, As Well As Art History, Scott Nethersole Sheds Light On The Relationship Between These Renaissance Images, Violence, And Ideas Of Artistic Invention And Authorship. Introduction -- Visualising Violence ; The Pazzi Conspiracy -- Locating Violence -- Sacred Art ; Flagellation, Empathy And The Problem Of Idealisation -- Secular Art ; Civility And Bestiality -- Centaurs And Form -- Invention And The Antique -- The Violence Of Representation, Or Making And Destroying -- Conclusion ; Pleasure. Scott Nethersole. Includes Bibliographical References (pages 289-309) And Index.