Fashioning Identities in Renaissance Art

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Accademia Del Disegno
Accademia Fiorentina
Art
artistic identity
artistic self-fashioning
artistic self-representation
Benozzo Gozzoli
Bindo Altoviti
Boijmans Van Beuningen
Category=AGA
Christ Child
Cultural
early modern visual culture
Eleonora Di Toledo
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eq_bestseller
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Fashioning
Florentine Accademia Del Disegno
Giorgio Vasari
Historical
Home Town
Identites
Identities
Italian Renaissance art
Ius Patronatus
Literature
Madonna Delle Grazie
Male Portrait
Museum Boijmans
Patronage Rights
Piero Di Cosimo
portraiture analysis
power and art in Italy
Protestantism
Religious Congregation
Renaissance
Renaissance patronage
Sacra Rappresentazione
signature studies
Sixteenth Century Florence
Sixteenth Century Florentines
social identity construction
Water Falling
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138712881
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Apr 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Originally published in 2000. Fashioning Identities analyses some of the different ways in which identities were fashioned in and with art during the Renaissance, taken as meaning the period c.1300-1600. The notion of such a search for new identities, expressed in a variety of new themes, styles and genres, has been all-pervasive in the historical and critical literature dealing with the period, starting with Burckhardt, and it has been given a new impetus by contemporary scholarship using a variety of methodological approaches. The identities involved are those of patrons, for whom artistic patronage was a means of consolidating power, projecting ideologies, acquiring social prestige or building a suitable public persona; and artists, who developed a distinctive manner to fashion their artistic identity, or drew attention to aspects of their artistic personality either in self portraiture, or the style and placing of their signature, or by exploiting a variety of literary forms.

Mary Rogers, University of Bristol, UK and co-editor with Frances Ames-Lewis of Concepts of Beauty in Renaissance Art. Introduction by Joanna Woods-Marsden, University of California, Los Angeles