Description

Book Synopsis
From the late seventeenth through the mid-eighteenth centuries, large-scale Italian frescoes soared in popularity as nobles in the German principalities of the Holy Roman Empire constructed new palaces at an unprecedented rate. They competed with one another to produce lavish decorative schemes that expressed their claim to princely power and political authority. Whereas previous art historians have primarily focused on iconographic and stylistic issues and generally treated these programs as individual commissions of regional courts, this book places the works of art within their broad cultural and historical contexts during the Enlightenment. This monograph explains how rulers gradually shifted from emphasizing military heroism to stressing their cultivation of the arts and sciences, and addresses how expressing membership in a specifically European civilization emerged as an integral visual theme and a key ambition of the German nobility.

Trade Review
"...Fulco has given us a very important book, isolating a small group of Venetian painters from their usual monographic contexts and discussing them instead in the larger context of grand German commissions; the four extensive enterprises he studies furnish a brilliant picture of court society in the eighteenth century." William L. Barcham, “A New Study on ‘Venezia altrove,’ Venetian Painters Working in German Lands in the Eighteenth Century,” Arte Veneta 73 (2016): 197-203.

Table of Contents
Acknowledgements List of Illustrations Abbreviations Introduction 1 The Aftermath of Military Conflict: A Rise in Princely Visual Culture (1648–1710) 2 War and International Politics: The Staircase Frescoes of Schloss Bensberg (1710–1714) 3 Dynasticism and Cultural Philanthropy: The Pictorial Program of Schloss Bensberg’s State Rooms (1710–1714) 4 The Blue Elector’s Aeneas: Jacopo Amigoni’s Images of War and Triumph at Schloss Schleissheim (1724–1726) 5 Ducal Power and Munificence: Carlo Innocenzo Carlone’s Frescoes in Schloss Ludwigsburg (1731–1733) 6 Prince-Episcopal Patronage and World Civilization: Giovanni Battista Tiepolo’s Apollo and the Four Continents in the Würzburg Residenz (1751–1753) Excursus: Italo-Germanic Artistic Exchange and Collaboration Epilogue Bibliography Index

Exuberant Apotheoses: Italian Frescoes in the Holy Roman Empire: Visual Culture and Princely Power in the Age of Enlightenment

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    A Hardback by Daniel Fulco

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      View other formats and editions of Exuberant Apotheoses: Italian Frescoes in the Holy Roman Empire: Visual Culture and Princely Power in the Age of Enlightenment by Daniel Fulco

      Publisher: Brill
      Publication Date: 31/03/2016
      ISBN13: 9789004308046, 978-9004308046
      ISBN10:
      Also in:
      History of art

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      From the late seventeenth through the mid-eighteenth centuries, large-scale Italian frescoes soared in popularity as nobles in the German principalities of the Holy Roman Empire constructed new palaces at an unprecedented rate. They competed with one another to produce lavish decorative schemes that expressed their claim to princely power and political authority. Whereas previous art historians have primarily focused on iconographic and stylistic issues and generally treated these programs as individual commissions of regional courts, this book places the works of art within their broad cultural and historical contexts during the Enlightenment. This monograph explains how rulers gradually shifted from emphasizing military heroism to stressing their cultivation of the arts and sciences, and addresses how expressing membership in a specifically European civilization emerged as an integral visual theme and a key ambition of the German nobility.

      Trade Review
      "...Fulco has given us a very important book, isolating a small group of Venetian painters from their usual monographic contexts and discussing them instead in the larger context of grand German commissions; the four extensive enterprises he studies furnish a brilliant picture of court society in the eighteenth century." William L. Barcham, “A New Study on ‘Venezia altrove,’ Venetian Painters Working in German Lands in the Eighteenth Century,” Arte Veneta 73 (2016): 197-203.

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements List of Illustrations Abbreviations Introduction 1 The Aftermath of Military Conflict: A Rise in Princely Visual Culture (1648–1710) 2 War and International Politics: The Staircase Frescoes of Schloss Bensberg (1710–1714) 3 Dynasticism and Cultural Philanthropy: The Pictorial Program of Schloss Bensberg’s State Rooms (1710–1714) 4 The Blue Elector’s Aeneas: Jacopo Amigoni’s Images of War and Triumph at Schloss Schleissheim (1724–1726) 5 Ducal Power and Munificence: Carlo Innocenzo Carlone’s Frescoes in Schloss Ludwigsburg (1731–1733) 6 Prince-Episcopal Patronage and World Civilization: Giovanni Battista Tiepolo’s Apollo and the Four Continents in the Würzburg Residenz (1751–1753) Excursus: Italo-Germanic Artistic Exchange and Collaboration Epilogue Bibliography Index

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