Description

Book Synopsis
To whom should we ascribe the great flowering of the arts in Renaissance Italy? Scholars have attributed great importance to the role played by patrons, arguing that some should even be regarded as artists in their own right. This approach is challenged by Jill Burke.

Trade Review

“No one writing about Florentine and Italian art history will be able to ignore this elegant and probing book.”

—F.W. Kent, Director,Monash University at Prato


“Probing, concise and grounded in extensive research, Jill Burke’s Changing Patrons: Social Identity and the Visual Arts in Renaissance Florence is a major study in the current vein. . . . Drawing continually on archival documents, Burke does a masterly job of tracking the ascent of her two families, particularly as seen in the fortunes of their palazzo and religious commissions. Seldom have the ties between social identities and art of display objects been so convincingly shown.”

—Lauro Martines Times Literary Supplement


“Burke's lucidly argued and well researched study proves to be a thought-provoking read whose significance goes well beyond a circle of readers interested in the study of patronage in Quattrocento Florence.”

—Gabriele Neher The Art Book


“The great strengths of Changing Patrons are Burke’s archival research into the Nasi and Del Pugliese families and her willingness to examine this research from a broad societal perspective. . . . It is well researched and well informed and both broadens our knowledge of specific examples of Florentine patronage and studies these examples in new ways. . . . Burke should be praised for both indicating and demonstrating how ideas about artistic patronage might be reframed.”

—Barnaby Nygren Sixteenth Century Journal


“Lucid explanations of artists’ contracts and the patronage of family chapels and building committees make Jill Burke’s first book an extremely useful introduction to ‘how the fifteenth-century [Florentine] patron could use paintings, sculptures, and buildings to mediate relationships with the wider world’ (p.189), and her thoughtful, often controversial, interpretations provide material for reflection.”

—Jonathan Katz Nelson Burlington Magazine


“The study of patronage in Renaissance Florence has a rich history over the past half a century and Changing Patrons by Jill Burke provides a welcome new chapter. Her succinct historiographical introduction will surely provide essential reading not only for those wishing to work in this specific area but also for any student of Renaissance Florence.”

—Samuel Bibby Object


“Burke’s lucidly argued and well researched study proves to be a thought-provoking read whose significance goes well beyond a circle of readers interested in the study of patronage in Quattrocento Florence.”

—Gabriele Neher The Art Book



Table of Contents

Contents

List of Illustrations

Acknowledgments

A Note on Transcriptions and Translations

Abbreviations

Introduction

Part I: Families, Neighbors, and Friends

1. Family Self-Fashioning

2. Private Wealth and Public Benefit: The Nasi and Del Pugliese Palaces

3. Family, Church, Community: The Appearance of Power in Santo Spirito

4. Patronage and the Art of Friendship: Piero del Pugliese's Patronage of Filippino Lippi

Part II: The Individual, the Family, and the Church

5. Patronage Rights and Wrongs: Building Identity at Santa Maria a Lecceto

6. Framing Patronage: Beauty and Order at the Church of the Innocenti

7. Differing Visions: Image and Audience in the Florentine Church

Part III: Identity and Change

8. Painted Prayers: Savonarola and the Audience of Images

Conclusions and Questions

Appendix

Nasi Family Tree

Del Pugliese Family Tree

Unpublished Documents

Poems Written About the Portrait of Piero del Pugliese by Filippino Lippi

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Changing Patrons

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    A Hardback by Jill Burke

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      Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
      Publication Date: 13/05/2004
      ISBN13: 9780271023625, 978-0271023625
      ISBN10: 0271023627
      Also in:
      Theory of art

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      To whom should we ascribe the great flowering of the arts in Renaissance Italy? Scholars have attributed great importance to the role played by patrons, arguing that some should even be regarded as artists in their own right. This approach is challenged by Jill Burke.

      Trade Review

      “No one writing about Florentine and Italian art history will be able to ignore this elegant and probing book.”

      —F.W. Kent, Director,Monash University at Prato


      “Probing, concise and grounded in extensive research, Jill Burke’s Changing Patrons: Social Identity and the Visual Arts in Renaissance Florence is a major study in the current vein. . . . Drawing continually on archival documents, Burke does a masterly job of tracking the ascent of her two families, particularly as seen in the fortunes of their palazzo and religious commissions. Seldom have the ties between social identities and art of display objects been so convincingly shown.”

      —Lauro Martines Times Literary Supplement


      “Burke's lucidly argued and well researched study proves to be a thought-provoking read whose significance goes well beyond a circle of readers interested in the study of patronage in Quattrocento Florence.”

      —Gabriele Neher The Art Book


      “The great strengths of Changing Patrons are Burke’s archival research into the Nasi and Del Pugliese families and her willingness to examine this research from a broad societal perspective. . . . It is well researched and well informed and both broadens our knowledge of specific examples of Florentine patronage and studies these examples in new ways. . . . Burke should be praised for both indicating and demonstrating how ideas about artistic patronage might be reframed.”

      —Barnaby Nygren Sixteenth Century Journal


      “Lucid explanations of artists’ contracts and the patronage of family chapels and building committees make Jill Burke’s first book an extremely useful introduction to ‘how the fifteenth-century [Florentine] patron could use paintings, sculptures, and buildings to mediate relationships with the wider world’ (p.189), and her thoughtful, often controversial, interpretations provide material for reflection.”

      —Jonathan Katz Nelson Burlington Magazine


      “The study of patronage in Renaissance Florence has a rich history over the past half a century and Changing Patrons by Jill Burke provides a welcome new chapter. Her succinct historiographical introduction will surely provide essential reading not only for those wishing to work in this specific area but also for any student of Renaissance Florence.”

      —Samuel Bibby Object


      “Burke’s lucidly argued and well researched study proves to be a thought-provoking read whose significance goes well beyond a circle of readers interested in the study of patronage in Quattrocento Florence.”

      —Gabriele Neher The Art Book



      Table of Contents

      Contents

      List of Illustrations

      Acknowledgments

      A Note on Transcriptions and Translations

      Abbreviations

      Introduction

      Part I: Families, Neighbors, and Friends

      1. Family Self-Fashioning

      2. Private Wealth and Public Benefit: The Nasi and Del Pugliese Palaces

      3. Family, Church, Community: The Appearance of Power in Santo Spirito

      4. Patronage and the Art of Friendship: Piero del Pugliese's Patronage of Filippino Lippi

      Part II: The Individual, the Family, and the Church

      5. Patronage Rights and Wrongs: Building Identity at Santa Maria a Lecceto

      6. Framing Patronage: Beauty and Order at the Church of the Innocenti

      7. Differing Visions: Image and Audience in the Florentine Church

      Part III: Identity and Change

      8. Painted Prayers: Savonarola and the Audience of Images

      Conclusions and Questions

      Appendix

      Nasi Family Tree

      Del Pugliese Family Tree

      Unpublished Documents

      Poems Written About the Portrait of Piero del Pugliese by Filippino Lippi

      Notes

      Bibliography

      Index

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