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Wall Painting, Civic Ceremony, and Sacred Space in Early Renaissance Italy

Wall Painting, Civic Ceremony, and Sacred Space in Early Renaissance Italy

Wall Painting, Civic Ceremony, and Sacred Space in Early Renaissance Italy

Jean K. Cadogan, Trinity College, Connecticut
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9781009535274
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    Wall Painting, Civic Ceremony and Sacred Space in Early Renaissance Italy investigates how mural paintings affirmed civic identities by visualizing ideas, experiences, memory, and history. Jean Cadogan focuses on four large mural decorations created by celebrated Florentine artists between 1377 and 1484. The paintings adorn important sacred spaces- the chapel of the Holy Belt in the cathedral of Prato, the monumental cemetery in Pisa's cathedral square, and the cathedral of Spoleto -- yet extoll civic virtues. Building on previously unpublished archival documents, primary sources, and recent scholarship, Cadogan relates the architectural and institutional histories of these sites, reconstructs the ceremonies that unfolded within them, and demonstrates how these sacred spaces were central to the historical, institutional, and religious identities of the host cities. She also offers new insights into the motives and mechanics of patronage and artistic production. Cadogan's study shows how images  reflected and shaped civic identity, even as they impressed through their scale and artistry.

    • Publishes documents that have been unknown or partially published
    • Examines works in small centers that are little studied in comparison to murals in Florence
    • Examines the theme of cultural patronage during the formation of the Florentine territorial state 1451–1484

    Product details

    No date available
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781009535274
    0 pages

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. 'Larger, more ornate, and more seemly': Agnolo Gaddi and the Chapel of the Holy Belt in Prato
    • 2. 'A Most Devout Place': the Camposanto from cemetery to civic space in fourteenth century Pisa
    • 3. 'Most holy and unique in the world': Filippo de' Medici, Benozzo Gozzoli and the completion of the Camposanto in the fifteenth century
    • 4. Rome in Spoleto: Bishop Berardo Eroli, Fra Filippo Lippi, and the Coronation of the Virgin Murals in the Duomo of Spoleto
    • Conclusion. 'Marvelous grace of hand'.
      Author
    • Jean K. Cadogan , Trinity College, Connecticut

      Jean Cadogan is Professor of Fine Arts at Trinity College. A graduate of Wellesley College and Harvard University, she was previously Curator of European Art at the Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford. Her publications include Wadsworth Atheneum Paintings II:  Italy and Spain, (Hartford 1991); Domenico Ghirlandaio:  Artist and Artisan (London and New Haven 2000), as well as numerous articles on drawings, mural paintings, and artisan families in Renaissance Florence.