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The Este Monuments and Urban Development in Renaissance Ferrara.


Charles M. Rosenberg, Cambridge and New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
: Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press (known colloquially as CUP) is a publisher given a Royal Charter by Henry VIII in 1534, and one of the two privileged presses (the other being Oxford University Press). , 1997.60 pls. + xvi + 329 pp. $75. ISBN ISBN
abbr.
International Standard Book Number


ISBN International Standard Book Number

ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m 
: 0-521-56139-6.

These volumes are assured an immediate and substantial impact in the fields of urban and architectural history This article or section is in need of attention from an expert on the subject.
Please help recruit one or [ improve this article] yourself. See the talk page for details.
 and, in the case of the Trachtenberg book, in that of visual cultural studies in general. Both authors situate sit·u·ate  
tr.v. sit·u·at·ed, sit·u·at·ing, sit·u·ates
1. To place in a certain spot or position; locate.

2. To place under particular circumstances or in a given condition.

adj.
 a series of major urbanistic interventions in a wider cultural and political history and in relation to prominent instances of artistic and architectural patronage. In his study of fourteenth-century Florentine urbanism, Trachtenberg explodes the model of periodization Periodization is the attempt to categorize or divide time into discrete named blocks. The result is a descriptive abstraction that provides a useful handle on periods of time with relatively stable characteristics.  that had obscured its vitality and originality in contrast to the "Renaissance." Rosenberg studies a celebrated episode of Renaissance or indeed early modern European urbanism, the "Herculean Addition" of Ferrara, but only in terms of longer-term processes and strategies for assigning or transforming signification SIGNIFICATION, French law. The notice given of a decree, sentence or other judicial act.  within a complex urban environment.

Trachtenberg is implicitly indebted to innovative recent work in cultural history and theory, but his book exemplifies and explicitly champions a specifically art historical hermeneutics hermeneutics, the theory and practice of interpretation. During the Reformation hermeneutics came into being as a special discipline concerned with biblical criticism.  engaging with "phenomenologically accessible" objects that "seem to be saying something" (24n). He applies this approach to artworks of a more familiar kind, but only in the light of case studies of urban development hitherto never regarded in terms of artful making, as opposed to statutory regulation. Rosenberg also moves between discussion of urban development and artwork, mostly monumental statuary stat·u·ar·y  
n. pl. stat·u·ar·ies
1. Statues considered as a group.

2. The art of making statues.

3. A sculptor.

adj.
Of, relating to, or suitable for a statue.
, seeing the latter as more accessible in terms of its symbolic values, though drawing on connotations inherent in the former. He focuses first on a sculpture of modest size adjoining a very large textual inscription; proceeds to monuments increasingly reliant on the expressive resources of the medium of statuary itself; and concludes with an effectively autonomous planning project, in the absence of the cues that a grandiose projected monument, never completed as planned, would have supplied.

These are strikingly different historiographical and intellectual projects. Trachtenberg presents a republic engaged in an often ruthless demonstration of authority, Rosenberg a princely state A princely state is any state under the reign of a prince and is thus a principality taken in the broad sense. The term refers not only to sovereign nations ruled by monarchs but also to lower polities ruled by various high nobles (often vassals in a feudal system).  working in part through explicit accommodation with subordinate constituencies. Trachtenberg mainly explores a transitional period, Rosenberg successive moments of transition. Rosenberg embeds analytical discussions in a historical narrative, while Trachtenberg expounds, often with a high degree of abstraction, a specific, highly cohesive political and cognitive world. Neither author seems influenced by prosopographical method and theory, though a strength of Rosenberg's book is his emphasis on the intersection of princely prince·ly  
adj. prince·li·er, prince·li·est
1. Of or relating to a prince; royal.

2. Befitting a prince, as:
a. Noble: a princely bearing.

b.
 power and its milieu, in which he emphasizes the role of collective memory, embodied in public monuments, buildings, and spaces.

Rosenberg's fine account of the evolution of Renaissance Ferrara is based on a firm command of archival and visual resources and draws on important but (at least in the U.S.) little-known Italian scholarship on the city. The opening chapter examines the city's early history, in part to establish the frameworks within which monuments and memories alike were later situated and/or shifted. Rosenberg then discusses four major monuments (one twice, because it was moved), all associated with the symbolic and or physical transformation of the city, and progressively liberated from engagement with specific buildings - the first anchored to the cathedral facade, the last designed for a Maidan-like public space. Two of the monuments are in the public square, and associated or aligned either with city hall or with the complex series of buildings and spaces occupied by the court.

Rosenberg reconstructs the circumstances and implications of each project, notably the famous triumphal arch carrying an equestrian statue, and associated with a leading patron, Leonello d'Este, and humanist, Alberti. He reviews the evidence for the latter's involvement, which he thinks likely, though he curiously downplays the role of a Ferrarese associate of Leonello, whose status as the latter's uncle he fails to mention. He contextualizes the innovative spatiality of the famous Herculean Addition in relation to an earlier development also involving a concentration of noble houses and an association of a princely palace with significant religious centers. He suggests a shift toward a scopic regime evident not only in "suburban" spatial development but also in the qualification of the main square as a theatral space through a remarkable "loggia loggia

Hall, gallery, or porch open to the air on one or more sides. It evolved in the Mediterranean region as an open sitting room with protection from the sun. It is often a roofed, arcaded open gallery on an upper story overlooking a court, though it can also be a
 of appearance," accommodating the prince's distanced gaze. This invites elaboration.

As a sustained intellectual and rhetorical performance, Trachtenberg's book is a remarkable achievement, a cultural history of power relations as inscribed in·scribe  
tr.v. in·scribed, in·scrib·ing, in·scribes
1.
a. To write, print, carve, or engrave (words or letters) on or in a surface.

b. To mark or engrave (a surface) with words or letters.
 in space but also in the cognitive world and perceptual faculties of the Trecento tre·cen·to  
n.
The 14th century, especially with reference to Italian art and literature.



[Italian, from (mil) trecento, (one thousand) three hundred : tre, three
. This is Baxandall's "period eye" through the lens of Foucauldian and Althusserian theory, backed by reference to the tough-minded historiographical current dealing with Florence, whose impact on a still idealizing Renaissance art history Trachtenberg finds disappointingly small. He examines the design of two great public spaces, the cathedral precinct and the Piazza della Signoria Piazza della Signoria (IPA pronunciation: [piɑtzʌ deɪʌ sinjoʊɹʌ]) is an L-shaped square in front of the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence, Italy. , following the implementation of three principles: the imprint of a major building on surrounding space, the creation or at least emergence of a formal order governing that space, and the concern with the optimal view of a building as integral to the design of the space associated with it.

The three principles lead into different orders of discussion. Trachtenberg examines the coherent remaking of the compact center through a concatenation of spaces he calls a sort of Ringsstrasse. He studies the sophisticated application of geometrical surveying and design procedures evidenced in manuscripts as well as in the layout of the east end of the cathedral. And he studies the evidence in contemporary paintings for attention to the selection of viewpoints. The challenge is to reconcile such distinct orders of historical reality and historiographical interest. Where some might see distinct registers of operation or attention as alternatives, Trachtenberg insists on the possibility of combination, as solutions emerged incrementally in response to a fluid economic environment and occasional instability in the political order. Trachtenberg uses a remarkable discussion of the combinatory, multi-media dimension of major Florentine artistic achievements (e.g., the whole east end of S. Croce) to document the Florentine capacity for long-term monumental bricolage bri·co·lage  
n.
Something made or put together using whatever materials happen to be available: "Even the decor is a bricolage, a mix of this and that" Los Angeles Times.
.

This is an always compelling and often polemical book. Trachtenberg seems to dismiss micro-history as inadequate editing, a position consonant with his equanimity e·qua·nim·i·ty  
n.
The quality of being calm and even-tempered; composure.



[Latin aequanimit
 about two candidates, of contrasting professional and institutional backgrounds, for authorship of the piazza scheme. His identification of a single privileged point of view toward a major monument raises the question of the possibility of other viewpoints, e.g., from a monument, or from another point in the square, like the Tetto dei Pisani along the western edge of the piazza. He dismisses Friedrich Antal's attempt at a Marxian history of Trecento visual culture as "inept," but Antal's attention to disparate currents of artistic expression suggests an alternative to Trachtenberg's emphasis on framing devices and conditions that, ironically, tend to dissolve the "phenomenological accessibility" of individual artworks. And, finally, both the argumentation in the book and its argument (in the sense of subject matter) have undergone a rigorous process of unification and abstraction that is exciting to follow. Nevertheless, to an inveterate inveterate /in·vet·er·ate/ (-vet´er-at) confirmed and chronic; long-established and difficult to cure.

in·vet·er·ate
adj.
1. Firmly and long established; deep-rooted.

2.
 micro-historian, as I confess myself to be, questions linger about the nature of the correlation between so coherent a historiographical framing and the coherence of the history it frames.

CHARLES BURROUGHS Binghamton University, SUNY SUNY - State University of New York  
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Title Annotation:Review
Author:Burroughs, Charles
Publication:Renaissance Quarterly
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Jun 22, 1999
Words:1186
Previous Article:The Dominion of the Eye: Urbanism, Art, and Power in Early Modern Florence.(Review)
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