La Vita delle 'Vite' Vasariane: Profilo storico di due edizioni.Carlo Maria Simonetti. La Vita delle 'Vite' Vasariane: Profilo storico di due edizioni. Accademia Toscana di Scienze e Lettere "La Colombaria" Studi 230. Florence: Leo S. Olschki Editore The publishing house of Leo S. Olschki (Florence, Italy) was founded in 1886 and is among the country's most important publishers of critical work in the humanities. External links
abbr. International Standard Book Number ISBN International Standard Book Number ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m : 88-222-5475-9. Giorgio Vasari's Lives of the Painters, Sculptors, and Architects has often been referred to as the Bible of Italian Renaissance art. Vasari's monumental collection of artists' lives was first published in Florence in 1550 and much revised in a second edition of 1568. The Lives is an argument in three parts, in each of which Vasari presents not only accounts of artists' lives, but a history of art. He covers art from antiquity to his own day, with a focus on how art reached perfection in the work of Michelangelo. Vasari tells us not only about what it is to be an artist in his day, he tells us why this is important. In the final life, which is on his own career, Vasari writes that the idea to commence the Lives originated at a dinner hosted by Cardinal Alessandro Farnese Noun 1. Alessandro Farnese - Italian pope from 1534 to 1549 who excommunicated Henry VIII of England in 1538 and initiated the Council of Trent in 1545; was active in the Counter Reformation and promoted the Society of Jesus for this purpose (1468-1549) Paul III at the Palazzo Farnese in Rome in the mid-1540s. The dinner was attended by the literati literati Scholars in China and Japan whose poetry, calligraphy, and paintings were supposed primarily to reveal their cultivation and express their personal feelings rather than demonstrate professional skill. of Rome, including Paolo Giovio Paolo Giovio (April 19 1483 – December 11, 1552) was an Italian physician, historian and biographer. He is best remembered as a chronicler of the Italian Wars. His eyewitness accounts of many of the battles form one of the most significant primary sources for the period. , Claudio Tolomei, Annibale Caro Annibale Caro (June 6, 1507-November 17, 1566) was an Italian poet. Biography Born in Civitanova Marche, near Ancona, he became tutor to the whealty family of Lodovico Gaddi in Florence, and then secretary to Lodovico's brother Giovanni. , and Francesco Maria Molza. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Vasari, it was Giovio's intent to write a collection of artists' lives with his assistance, but Vasari was later convinced by Giovio and others that he, Vasari, should be the one to write the Lives. The dinner is both fact and fiction: fact in that Vasari most likely did enjoy such meals at the Palazzo Farnese; fiction in that it probably didn't happen in quite this way--at least one of the participants mentioned by Vasari, Molza, was deceased at the time Vasari claims this particular meal occurred. The fiction, however, allows us to consider how Vasari scripted his career and the writing of the Lives. The dinner places Vasari at the heart of Rome's literati, echoing Plato's Symposium in a way that is both critically significant and, by then, fashionable in sixteenth-century Roman courtly court·ly adj. court·li·er, court·li·est 1. Suitable for a royal court; stately: courtly furniture and pictures. 2. Elegant; refined: courtly manners. circles. This fiction places Vasari within a larger humanist context. Carlo Maria Simonetti's La Vita delle 'Vite' Vasariane: Profilo storico di due edizioni offers the reader an appreciation of the practical side of humanism in the sixteenth century: specifically, what was involved in getting the Lives printed. Simonetti presents an account of the two printing houses in Florence that produced Vasari's work, the Torrentino press in 1550 and the Giunti press for the second edition. We read here about the financial and physical difficulties of developing a printing house in Florence at this time, as well as the uses to which the Medici Medici, Italian family Medici (mĕ`dĭchē, Ital. mā`dēchē), Italian family that directed the destinies of Florence from the 15th cent. until 1737. sought to adapt this business. The Fleming, Laurens Lenaerts van der Beke, known in Florence as Lorenzo Torrentino, brought the Torrentino press to Florence. Simonetti suggests that Cosimo I Cosimo I orig. Cosimo de' Medici (born June 12, 1519—died April 21, 1574, Castello, near Florence) Second duke of Florence (1537–74) and first grand duke of Tuscany (1569–74). preferred Torrentino probably because the printer was non-Florentine and his Northern European contacts presented opportunities to Florence and thereby to the Medici court. This suggests, further, that Vasari's own text would reach a public north of the Alps (as it did), further expanding Vasari's renown and the glory of the Medici as patrons of the arts, a dominant theme in the Lives. Simonetti outlines Vasari's dealings with the printers as well as with his numerous friends who were critical to the completion of the text. At the time the first edition was being printed, Vasari was in Rome seeking the favors of the new pope, Julius III (Vasari's former patron, Giovanni Maria del Monte, had been elevated to the papacy papacy (pā`pəsē), office of the pope, head of the Roman Catholic Church. He is pope by reason of being bishop of Rome and thus, according to Roman Catholic belief, successor in the see of Rome (the Holy See) to its first bishop, St. Peter. in February 1550). In spite of the anticipated success of the Lives, Vasari was committed to the art of painting and his swift turn to Rome in 1550 was a move to secure a position at the papal court. One gets the impression from reading the letters to Vasari from his friends in Florence--namely, Vincenzio Borghini and Pier Francesco Giambullari, who were checking facts, preparing indices, and otherwise shepherding the manuscript through to its printed completion--that Vasari was pleased to set the Lives aside, if only for a while. Nevertheless, this dated correspondence indicates that Vasari responded promptly to questions raised by Borghini and Giambullari, clearly indicating the author's desire to see his work finalized. Simonetti's references to the portraits of artists in both editions illuminate Vasari's appreciation of an attist's singular identity, and his descriptions of the frontispieces and the images of Fame and the Arts, rich in symbolic meaning for each edition, add to our understanding of iconography iconography (ī'kŏnŏg`rəfē) [Gr.,=image-drawing] or iconology [Gr.,=image-study], in art history, the study and interpretation of figural representations, either individual or symbolic, religious or secular; in Vasari's literary and visual productions. Carlo Maria Simonetti's La Vita delle 'Vite' Vasariane: Profilo storico di due edizioni, a welcomed contribution to current scholarship on Vasari, will serve as a critical reference for scholars of the Lives and other humanist texts printed in the sixteenth century. MARJORIE OCH University of Mary Washington The University of Mary Washington (formerly Mary Washington College) is a coeducational, selective, state-funded, four-year liberal arts college and a member of the Council of Public Liberal Arts Colleges in Fredericksburg, Virginia. |
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