Bibliographic Information

Florence

edited by Francis Ames-Lewis

(Artistic centers of the Italian Renaissance)

Cambridge University Press, 2012

  • : hardback

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This volume examines works of art in a variety of media produced in Florence during the period from 1300 to 1600. Chronologically organized, each chapter examines works of art and architecture within the context of the major political, social, economic and cultural events of the period. Patterns of patronage, both secular and religious, that accompanied changes in political authority as power shifted from Republican regimes to rule by the Medici family and back are also assessed. The volume follows the movements and trends that were initiated by Florentine artists beginning with Giotto in the fourteenth century; then followed a century later by Masaccio, Donatello, Brunelleschi and Michelangelo; and finally the achievements of sixteenth-century artists such as Cellini, Bronzino and Vasari. The book is lavishly illustrated in both black and white and color.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction Francis Ames-Lewis
  • 1. Florence, 1300-1600 Francis W. Kent
  • 2. Florence before the black death Janet Robson
  • 3. The arts in Florence after the black death Louise Bourdua
  • 4. Republican Florence, 1400-1434 Adrian W. B. Randolph
  • 5. The Florence of Cosimo 'Il Vecchio' de' Medici: within and beyond the walls Roger J. Crum
  • 6. Art and cultural identity in Lorenzo de' Medici's Florence Caroline Elam
  • 7. Republican Florence and the arts, 1494-1513 Jill Burke
  • 8. Florence under the Medici pontificates, 1513-1537 William E. Wallace
  • 9. Cosimi I and the arts Elizabeth Pilliod.

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