Description

Book Synopsis
In a study that sweeps from Classical Antiquity to the seventeenth century, Robert D. Huerta explores the common intellectual threads that link the art of Johannes Vermeer to the philosophy of Plato. Examining the work of luminaries such as Plotinus, Nicholas of Cusa, St. Augustine, Ficino, Raphael, Keller, Galileo, Descartes, and Hoydens, Huerta argues that the concurrence of idealism and naturalism in Vermeer's art reflects the Dutch master's assimilation of Platonic and classical ideals, concepts that were part of the Renaissance revival of classical thought. Pursuing a Platonic path, Vermeer used his paintings as a visual dialectic, as part of his program to create a physical instantiation of the Ideal. This book is the result of years of reflection on the creative commonalities to be found in signal art and pioneering scientific discoveries.

Trade Review
"An unusual and innovative book...[Huerta's review] is interesting and suggestive, especially in the context of 17th-century art and culture." -- F. W. Robinson * Cornell University *

Vermeer and Plato: Painting the Ideal

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    A Hardback by Robert D. Huerta

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      View other formats and editions of Vermeer and Plato: Painting the Ideal by Robert D. Huerta

      Publisher: Bucknell University Press
      Publication Date: 01/09/2005
      ISBN13: 9781611482249, 978-1611482249
      ISBN10: 1611482240

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In a study that sweeps from Classical Antiquity to the seventeenth century, Robert D. Huerta explores the common intellectual threads that link the art of Johannes Vermeer to the philosophy of Plato. Examining the work of luminaries such as Plotinus, Nicholas of Cusa, St. Augustine, Ficino, Raphael, Keller, Galileo, Descartes, and Hoydens, Huerta argues that the concurrence of idealism and naturalism in Vermeer's art reflects the Dutch master's assimilation of Platonic and classical ideals, concepts that were part of the Renaissance revival of classical thought. Pursuing a Platonic path, Vermeer used his paintings as a visual dialectic, as part of his program to create a physical instantiation of the Ideal. This book is the result of years of reflection on the creative commonalities to be found in signal art and pioneering scientific discoveries.

      Trade Review
      "An unusual and innovative book...[Huerta's review] is interesting and suggestive, especially in the context of 17th-century art and culture." -- F. W. Robinson * Cornell University *

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