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From Filippo Lippi to Piero della Francesca : Fra Carnevale and the making of a Renaissance master
Title:
From Filippo Lippi to Piero della Francesca : Fra Carnevale and the making of a Renaissance master
Author:
Christiansen, Keith, editor.
ISBN:
9781588391421

9781588391438

9780300107166
Physical Description:
1 online resource (384 pages) : illustrations (some color) ; 29 cm.
General Note:
Published in conjunction with the exhibition held at the Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan, Oct. 13, 2004-Jan. 9, 2005; and at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Feb. 1-May 1, 2005.
Contents:
In search of Fra Carnevale, a "painter of high repute" / Florence : Filippo Lippi and Fra Carnevale / Fra Carnevale, Urbino, and the Marches : an alternative view of the Renaissance / Fra Carnevale and the practice of architecture / Catalogue -- Fra Carnevale in Florence : catalogue 1-27 -- Fra Carnevale in Urbino and the Marches : catalogue 28-47 -- Documents in the Florentine archives / Documents in the Urbino archives / Documents in the Barberini archives / Observations on the technique and artistic culture of Fra Carnevale / Plates -- Carpentry and panel construction
Abstract:
"In 1934 the Italian government lifted restrictions governing the fabled Barberini Collection in Rome, making it possible for two intriguing fifteenth-century paintings to be put on the international art market. Within just two years both had been sold - one to The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the other to the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. Neither their authorship nor their subjects were certain, but their ambitious depiction of architecture no less than their discursive, anecdotal approach to narration made them unique among Early Renaissance paintings. Who was their author? What was their function? How to explain their mastery of perspective and their sophisticated architectural settings? Building on over a century of scholarship as well as completely new archival information, this catalogue proposes answers to all three questions. In doing so, it examines the art of Florence in the 1440s and the work of, among others, Fra Filippo Lippi, Domenico Veneziano, Luca della Robbia, and Michelozzo."--BOOK JACKET.
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