Search Books
Jean Fouquet and the Invent… A Treatise on Painting (Gre…

Pieter Bruegel the Elder: Art Discourse in the Sixteenth-Century Netherlands (Visual Culture in Early Modernity)

Author Richardson, Todd M.
Publisher Ashgate
Category Art
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
155.22 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸

✓ In stock. Usually ships within 4 to 5 days.

Share:
Book Details
PublisherAshgate
ISBN / ASIN0754668169
ISBN-139780754668169
AvailabilityIn stock. Usually ships within 4 to 5 days.
Sales Rank3,143,466
CategoryArt
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

"Pieter Bruegel the Elder: Art Discourse in the Sixteenth-Century Netherlands" examines the later images by Bruegel in the context of two contemporary discourses - art theoretical and convivial. The first concerns the purely visual interactions between artists and artistic practices that unfold in pictures, which often transgress the categorical boundaries modern scholars place on their work, such as sacred and profane, antique and modern, and Italian and Northern. In this context, the images themselves - those of Bruegel, his contemporaries and predecessors - make up the primary source material from which the author argues. The second deals with the dialogue that occurred between viewers in front of pictures and the way in which pictorial strategies facilitated their visual experience and challenged their analytical capabilities. In this regard, the author expands his base of primary sources to include convivial texts, dialogues and correspondences, such as those between Erasmus and his friends, as well as inventories of homes, and texts by rhetoricians and Northern humanists addressing art theoretical issues. Challenging the conventional wisdom that the artist eschewed Italianate influences, this study demonstrates how Bruegel's later peasant paintings reveal a complicated artistic dialogue in which visual concepts and pictorial motifs from Italian and classical ideas are employed for a subject that was increasingly recognized in the sixteenth century as a specifically Northern phenomenon. Similar to the Dutch rhetorician societies and French Pleiade poets who cultivated the vernacular language using classical Latin, the function of this interpictorial discourse, the author argues, was not simply to imitate international trends, a common practice during the period, but to use it to cultivate his own visual vernacular language. Although the focus is primarily on Bruegel's later work, the author's conclusions are applied to sketch a broader understanding of both the artist himself and the vibrant artistic dialogue occurring in the Netherlands during the sixteenth century.
Art History: The Key Concepts (Routledge Key Guides)
View
Out of Time: Desire in Atemporal Cinema
View
Japanese Studio Crafts: Tradition and the Avant-Garde
View
Mona Lisa: Inside the Painting
View
Beci Orpin Journal: Lost Girl
View
A Bushel of Pearls: Painting for Sale in Eighteenth-Ce…
View
Elvira Hufschmid - mobile distance (German Edition)
View
Writers who committed suicide: Ernest Hemingway, Virgi…
View
Color Harmonies
View