History of Italian Art, 2 Volume SetISBN: 978-0-7456-1819-7
Paperback
720 pages
October 1996, Polity
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A distinguished group of cultural historians provides a
comprehensive account of Italian "art" in the wider sense: as well
as painting and sculpture, they examine photography and
iconography, restorations and fakes, landscapes and writing. They
focus not only on individual artists and epochs, but on the
conditions under which Italian art was and is created: its
principles, intentions and effects.
Together the books represent a radical break with the compendium
of facts and works found in conventional books on art history,
exploring the mentalities and the institutions, the typography and
the geography which have determined the main characteristics of
Italian art over a thousand years.
Volume One includes contributions from Peter Burke on the
history of the Italian artist from the twelfth to the twentieth
century, Enrico Castelnuovo and Carlo Ginzburg on regional art
outside the traditional centres, Nicole Dacos on antique art,
Francis Haskell on the "dispersal" and conservation of artistic
works, and Anna Maria Mura on the public reception of art.
Volume Two includes contributions from Giovanni Previtali on the periodization of Italian art history, Giovanni Romero on art and everyday life in the Renaissance court, Salvadore Settis on iconography in the Middle Ages; Bruno Toscano on art and the church in the seventeenth century, and Federico Zeri on the concept of the Renaissance and the conflict between historical and art-historical periods.