Guido Reni's Abduction of Helen : the politics and rhetoric of painting in seventeenth-century Europe
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Guido Reni's Abduction of Helen : the politics and rhetoric of painting in seventeenth-century Europe
Cambridge University Press, 1997
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Abduction of Helen
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 284-297) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This study explores how Guido Reni's Abduction of Helen functioned as an instrument of political rhetoric in the context of diplomatic relations between Spain, France, and the Holy See during the Thirty Years War. The painting was commissioned amidst diplomatic negotiations between the Spanish monarchy and the papacy of Pope Urban VIII. Although actually commissioned for the King of Spain by his ambassador to the Holy See, the papacy, the author argues, sought to control the artist's interpretation of his subject - the famous event that caused the Trojan War - by transforming it into a political metaphor alluding to the war between France and the Habsburgs. Contemporary encomia on Guido's Abduction of Helen show that his style was perceived as analagous to the literary manner of the Seicentismo, which the Barberini papacy promoted as part of its cultural agenda.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Origins and early history
- 2. A message for Madrid
- 3. The construction of fame
- 4. Seicentismo and interpretation
- Conclusion
- Appendix.
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