Available Formats
Titian: His Life
By (Author) Sheila Hale
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperPress
20th July 2012
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
759.5
Hardback
864
1320g
The first biography since 1877 of Venice's greatest artist a towering work which captures the genius of Titian, beautifully illustrated throughout with full colour plates.
Crammed with new or expanded or re-thought information about this stubbornly mysterious giant. Impressive She shines a light on the mysterious conflict of energies that makes his genius so difficult to encapsulate. Hale is also an enthusiastic collector of characters and her descriptions of the band of Renaissance crackpots who constituted Titians employers result in some of the books most entertaining stretches Sunday Times
Evokes the sensuality of Titians working methods and provides subtle insights into his enigmatic last paintings a scrupulous and exhaustive account that is informed by the latest scholarship, but admirably free of academic cant her book provides by far the richest account yet of Titians interactions with the citys labyrinthine social fabric Daily Telegraph
Magnificent the elegance and energy of her narrative a born biographers eye for detail. This is the first serious attempt for 100 years at encompassing Titians life. Its combination of the eminently readable and the profoundly authentic is remarkable Literary Review
A huge and exceptional new study of the painter a superb portrait of the artist an example of measured scholarship, judicious opinion, and telling framing detail Guardian
The depth of her research is both impressive and astonishing enriched by vivid anecdotes and gossipy snippets it all makes for compelling reading Independent
Scholarly, erudite, endlessly inquisitive and as clear as can be many of the bit-part players in the book are brilliantly vivid Mail on Sunday
Magisterial a poised and sincere account of Titians life and art. A truly triumphal undertaking and a prodigious monument to one of the giants of Western art The Art Newspaper
Sheila Hale has known and often lived in Venice since 1965 when she began work as a research assistant to John Hale. She is the author of a number of books including The Man Who Lost His Language. She is a trustee of Venice in Peril and lives in Twickenham.