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Redefining Eclecticism in Early Modern Bolognese Painting: Ideology, Practice, and Criticism [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius: 240x170 mm, 8 Illustrations, color; 44 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Visual and Material Culture, 1300-1700
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Feb-2019
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9462986010
  • ISBN-13: 9789462986015
  • Formaat: Hardback, 240 pages, kõrgus x laius: 240x170 mm, 8 Illustrations, color; 44 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Visual and Material Culture, 1300-1700
  • Ilmumisaeg: 25-Feb-2019
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9462986010
  • ISBN-13: 9789462986015
Redefining Eclecticism in Early Modern Bolognese Painting. Ideology, Practice, and Criticism focuses on the unique nature of early modern Bolognese painting that found its expression in stylistic diversity. The flourishing of different stylistic approaches in the Mannerist paintings of the previous generation evolved, at the turn the seventeenth century, in the work of the Bolognese painters into an approach best described as eclecticism, characterized by the combination of two or more styles in a single work of art. Eclectism was a major innovation and major contribution to the history of art. But it then also became a critical term that suffered much negative press. The book therefore also traces the role of ecclecticism as a concept in the evolution of criticism and scholarship about the Bolognese school of painting over 250 years, showing how the dramatically vacillating attitudes towards this concept shaped the historical view of the Bolognese painters, ultimately having a tremendous dampening impact on our understanding of seventeenth-century art.

Arvustused

"There is a long history of dispute over the word eclecticism and its application to paintings of the Carracci school. Unger (Ben-Gurion Univ., Israel) surveys the rise and fall of that term and makes a valiant and deft attempt to resuscitate it and apply it to particular works. Unger sorts out knotty controversies = clearly and cogently, aware that postmodernism currently makes new space for eclecticism." Summing Up: Recommended - P. Emison, University of New Hampshire, CHOICE Reviews, November 2019 Vol. 57 No. 3

List of Plates and Figures
9(4)
Preface 13(4)
Introduction 17(16)
1 Defining Eclecticism
33(24)
Assimilated Eclecticism -- Vasari's Raphael
41(5)
Arbitrary Eclecticism
46(2)
Non-Assimilated Eclecticism -- A Definition
48(9)
2 Ideology
57(48)
Gabriele Paleotti's Discourse on Sacred Images
62(13)
A Pictorial Manifest: Alliance between Disegno and Colore
75(13)
Carlo Cesare Malvasia and the Assemblage of Styles
88(17)
3 Practice
105(54)
The Terrestrial and Celestial Realms
106(22)
Portraits of Saints: St. Carlo Borromeo's Effigy
128(13)
Other Eclectic Paintings
141(18)
4 Criticism
159(48)
Winckelmann's Introduction of Eclecticism into Artistic Discourse
160(8)
The Nineteenth-Century juste milieu
168(11)
The Dismissal of Eclecticism in the Twentieth Century
179(28)
Conclusion
207(2)
The Eclectic Approach
207(2)
Epilogue
209(16)
Eclecticism in a Roman Chapel
209(16)
Index 225
Daniel M. Unger teaches the History of Early Modern Art at Ben-Gurion University, Israel. His research focuses on seventeenth-century Bolognese and Roman painting. His recent book Redefining Eclecticism in Early Modern Bolognese Painting: Ideology, Practice, and Criticism was published by Amsterdam University Press in 2019.