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The Embedded Portrait: Giotto, Giottino, Angelico

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Embedded Portrait: Giotto, Giottino, Angelico

Contributors:
ISBN:

9780691244266

Publisher:

Princeton University Press

Imprint:

Princeton University Press

Publication Date:

1st January 2024

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Theory of art
Christianity: sacred texts and revered writings

Dewey:

704.942

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

376

Dimensions:

Width 191mm, Height 267mm

Description

A new study of the early Renaissance portrait

In fourteenth-century Italy, ever more women and mennot only clergy but also laityintroduced their own portraits into sacred paintings. Images of modern supplicants, submissive and prayerful, shared space with the holy narratives. The portraits mimicked the first worshippers of Christ: Mary, the Three Magi, Mary Magdalene. At the same time, they modelled, for modern viewers, ideal involvement in the emotion-laden stories. In The Embedded Portrait, Christopher S. Wood traces these incursions of the real and profane into Florentine sacred painting between Giotto and Fra Angelico.

The portraits not only intruded upon a sacred space, but also intervened in an artwork. The pressure exerted by the modern interloperstheir lives and experiences, implied by their portraitsthreatened the formal closure that had served as a powerful symbolic form of the pact between God and humans. The Embedded Portrait reconstructs this art historical drama from the point of view of the artists rather than the patrons. Following clues left by Vasari, the book assigns a leading role to the painter Giottino, or little Giotto. Little-known today but highly regarded in his lifetime, Giottino proposed a new manner of painting that was later realized by Fra Angelico through his own innovative approach to the problem of the embedded portrait.

Seeking not to stabilize the artworks but to extend their reach, the interpretations offered in The Embedded Portrait recreate and update the psychic and libidinal energies that gave rise to these works in the first place.

Author Bio

Christopher S. Wood is professor in the Department of German at New York University. He is the author of A History of Art History (Princeton) and, with Alexander Nagel, Anachronic Renaissance.

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