Michael Shamansky, Bookseller Inc.
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P.O. Box 3904, Kingston, New York 12402 Phone: 845-331-8519 Email: mshamans@artbooks.com

Item Number: 111672
Title: CARAVAGGIO and Pictorial Narrative : Dislocating the Istoria in Early Modern Painting
Author: Pericolo, Lorenzo
Price: Not Available
ISBN: 9781905375486
Description: Turnhout: Harvey Miller, 2011. 28cm., hardcover, 654pp., 336 illus., most in color. Summary: A very important part of Caravaggio’s production consists of pictorial narratives, mostly religious. According to early modern aesthetics, Caravaggio thus practiced the artistic genre of the istoria: the most discussed and thoroughly defined pictorial institution of his time. Unanimously, seventeenth-century artists and art theorists censored and condemned Caravaggio’s art for its numerous deficiencies and faults in regard to the principles of the istoria. In spite of all these testimonies, Caravaggio’s innovations in and misuses of the technologies specific to early modern pictorial narrative have never been systematically studied, debated and put into historical perspective. In this volume, Lorenzo Pericolo argues that Caravaggio’s multiple experimentations with the traditional devices of the istoria not only represent the core of an unprecedented "poetics of dislocation," but also unsettled, dismantled and expanded the scope of pictorial narrative in ways that would have redefined and deeply transformed the concept of painting and artistic creation, had Caravaggio’s enterprise not have been ferociously criticized and stigmatized as both aberrant and defective. To solidly establish the importance and groundbreaking charge of Caravaggio’s work, Pericolo examines the notion of Leon Battista Alberti’s istoria as interpreted and developed by early modern artists and theorists—from Leonardo to Vasari, from Lomazzo to Poussin, and from Michelangelo to Bellori—in broad surveys in which the concepts of diachrony, duration, eurythmy, propriety, verisimilitude, and pictorial truth— among others—are carefully examined on a theoretical and practical level. By analyzing the paintings of Caravaggio’s followers such as Cecco del Caravaggio, Battistello Caracciolo, Valentin de Boulogne and, not least, Diego Velázquez, Pericolo explores how Caravaggio’s innovations in the domain of pictorial narrative were differently construed, elaborated upon and brought to fruition in the aftermath of the master’s death in 1610, thereby offering a critical explanation of the implosion and extinction of the Caravaggesque movement in the 1630s.

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Phone: 845-331-8519
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