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Private Lives in Renaissance Venice: Art, Architecture, and the Family

Patricia Fortini Brown

 

לקטלוג

 

This book offers an engaging and original perspective on the private lives and material culture of aristocratic families in sixteenth-century Venice. Distinguished art historian Patricia Fortini Brown takes us behind the elegant, closed doors of grand palaces built along the Venetian canals - the homes of families who wished to live in a noble manner. She examines the roles of both fine and applied arts in family life as well as the public massages that these impressive homes conveyed.

 

 Illustrated with many varied and unusual images, the book provides a lively picture of the aristocratic lifestyle during a period of changing definitions of nobility. As the sixteenth century opened, members of the participate were increasingly withdrawing from trade, desiring to be seen as "gentlemen in fact" as well as "gentlemen in name". The author considers why this was so and explores such wide-ranging themes as attitudes toward wealth and display, the articulation of family identity, the interplay between the public and the private, and the emergence of characteristically Venetian decorative practices and styles of art and architecture. Brown focuses new light on the visual culture of Venetian women - how they lived within, furnished, and decorated their homes; what spaces were allotted to them; what their roles and domestic tasks were; how they dressed; how they raised their children ; and how they entertained. Bringing together both high arts and low, the book examines all aspects of Renaissance material culture and arrives at an account of Venetian households unequalled in vividness and detail.

 

Patricia Fortini Brown is a professor at Princeton University where she is chair of the Department of Art & Archeology. She was president of the Renaissance Society of America (2000-2002) and Slade Professor of Fine Arts at the University of Cambridge (2001). Her Books include Venetian Narrative Painting in the Age of Carpaccio (1998), Venice and Antiquity: The Venetian Sense of the Past 1996), and Art and Life in Renaissance Venice 1997).

 

 

 

 

 

Private Lives in Renaissance Venice: Art, Architecture, and the Family