Tastes and temptations : food and art in Renaissance Italy

Bibliographic Information

Tastes and temptations : food and art in Renaissance Italy

John Varriano

(California studies in food and culture, 27)(Ahmanson・Murphy fine arts imprint)

University of California Press, c2009

  • : cloth
  • : [pbk]

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents
Volume

: cloth ISBN 9780520259041

Description

This title features fruits and vegetables as erotic metaphors in still life paintings, the Florentine Baptistry that is replicated in sausage and cheese by Andrea del Sarto, a recipe for fish that is molded in the shape of a goat, and the discovery of an Ovidian scene at the bottom of a soup bowl. A feast for the mind and eye, this beautifully illustrated, compellingly readable book is a rich exploration of the little examined interplay between art and cuisine during the Italian Renaissance. Exploring a dazzling array of art works, and drawing from period recipes and menus, John Varriano considers the many, often surprising, ways that cooks and artists converged and drew from each other's worlds. Among other topics, he considers the significance of culinary images in Renaissance art; traces parallels in the use of ingredients such as eggs and oil in kitchens and in studios; examines centerpieces by artists that were made of food; looks at the emergence of the celebrity cook and celebrity painter; and much more. Woven throughout with the flavors and colors of the era, this book of Renaissance temptations expands our understanding of the traditional boundaries of creative expression.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction Parallels in Food and Art 1. Artists and Cooks 2. Regional Tastes Images of Food in Art 3. Significant Still Lifes 4. Sacred Suppers 5. Erotic Appetites Food in the Studio, Art at the Table 6. Eggs, Butter, Lard, and Oil 7. Eating and Erudition 8. Edible Art Postscript Notes Bibliography List of Illustrations and Credits Index
Volume

: [pbk] ISBN 9780520269941

Description

Fruits and vegetables as erotic metaphors in still life paintings, the Florentine Baptistry replicated in sausage and cheese by Andrea del Sarto, a recipe for fish molded in the shape of a goat, the discovery of an Ovidian scene at the bottom of a soup bowl. A feast for the mind and eye, this beautifully illustrated, compellingly readable book is a rich exploration of the little examined interplay between art and cuisine during the Italian Renaissance. Exploring a dazzling array of art works, and drawing from period recipes and menus, John Varriano considers the many, often surprising, ways that cooks and artists converged and drew from each other's worlds. Among other topics, he considers the significance of culinary images in Renaissance art; traces parallels in the use of ingredients such as eggs and oil in kitchens and in studios; examines centerpieces by artists that were made of food; looks at the emergence of the celebrity cook and celebrity painter; and, much more. Woven throughout with the flavors and colors of the era, this book of Renaissance temptations expands our understanding of the traditional boundaries of creative expression.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction Parallels in Food and Art 1. Artists and Cooks 2. Regional Tastes Images of Food in Art 3. Significant Still Lifes 4. Sacred Suppers 5. Erotic Appetites Food in the Studio, Art at the Table 6. Eggs, Butter, Lard, and Oil 7. Eating and Erudition 8. Edible Art Postscript Notes Bibliography List of Illustrations and Credits Index

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