Fr. 136.00

Seeing Renaissance Glass - Art, Optics, and Glass of Early Modern Italy, 1250-1425

English · Hardback

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Description

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With the invention of eyeglasses around 1280 near Pisa, the mundane medium of glass transformed early modern optical technology and visuality. It also significantly influenced contemporaneous art, religion, and science. References to glass are found throughout the Bible and in medieval hagiography and poetry. For instance, glass is mentioned in descriptions of Heavenly Jerusalem, the Beatific Vision, and the Incarnation. At the same time, a well-known Islamic scientific treatise, which likened a portion of the eye's anatomy to glass, entered the scientific circles of the Latin West. Amidst this complex web of glass-related phenomena early modern Italian artists used glass in some of their most important artworks but, until now, no study has offered a comprehensive consideration of the important role glass played in shaping the art of the Italian Renaissance.
Seeing Renaissance Glass explores how artists such as Giotto, Duccio, Nicola Pisano, Simone Martini, and others employed the medium of glass-whether it be depictions of glass or actual glass in the form of stained glass, gilded glass, and transparent glass-to resonate with the period's complex visuality and achieve their artistic goals.
Such an interdisciplinary approach to the visual culture of early modern Italy is particularly well-suited to an introductory humanities course as well as classes on media studies and late medieval and early Renaissance art history. It is also ideal for a general reader interested in art history or issues of materiality.

List of contents

Illustrations - Acknowledgments - Introduction to Seeing Renaissance Glass: Art, Optics, and Glass of Early Modern Italy, 1250-1425 - Stained Glass: Duccio, Simone Martini, and Taddeo Gaddi - Gilded Glass: Nicola Pisano, Simone Martini, Orcagna, and Paolo di Giovanni Fei - Transparent Glass from the East: Beruni, Hunain, and Alhazen - Transparent Glass in the West: Pietro Lorenzetti, Naddo Ceccarelli, and Others - Verre Églomisé Reliquaries: Pietro Teutonico and Tommaso da Modena - Conclusion: Giotto, Brunelleschi, Alberti, and the Network of Glass - Index.

About the author










Sarah M. Dillon is Assistant Professor of Art History at Kingsborough Community College, CUNY, specializing in early modern art. She received her Ph.D. from the Graduate Center, CUNY, and her work has been published in Comitatus, the Chicago Art Journal, and Burlington Magazine.

Summary

Seeing Renaissance Glass explores how artists such as Giotto, Duccio, Nicola Pisano, Simone Martini, and others employed the medium of glass—whether it be depictions of glass or actual glass in the form of stained glass, gilded glass, and transparent glass—to resonate with the period’s complex visuality and achieve their artistic goals.

Product details

Authors Sarah Dillon, Dillon Sarah
Publisher Peter Lang
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 30.11.2018
 
EAN 9781433148347
ISBN 978-1-4331-4834-7
No. of pages 214
Dimensions 172 mm x 230 mm x 19 mm
Weight 418 g
Illustrations 34 Abb.
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Art > Miscellaneous

Renaissance, Modern, ART / Techniques / General, Sarah, Simpson, Optics, Ceramic arts, pottery, glass, ART / Sculpture & Installation, ART / Color Theory, Italy, Glass, Ceramics, mosaic and glass: artworks, early, Dillon, Meagan, 1250–1425

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