Cimabue and the Franciscans
Holly Flora
Harvey Miller Publishers
English Text.
London, 2019; bound, pp. 280, 160 col. ill., cm 23,5x30,5.
(Renovatio Artium. 4).
series: Renovatio Artium
ISBN: 1-912554-01-1 - EAN13: 9781912554010
Subject: Monographs (Painting and Drawing)
Period: 1000-1400 (XII-XIV) Middle Ages
Places: Tuscany
Languages:
Weight: 0.91 kg
This book offers a fresh look at the broader question of artistic change in the late thirteenth century by examining the intersection of two histories: that of the artist Cimabue (ca. 1240-1302), and that of the Franciscan Order. While focused on the work of a single artist, this study sheds new light on the religious motives and artistic means that fueled the period's visual and spiritual transformations. Flora's study reveals that Cimabue was not just a crucial figure in processes of stylistic change. He and his Franciscan patrons engaged with complicated intellectual and theological ideas about materials, memory, beauty, and experience, creating innovative works of art that celebrated the Order and enabled new modes of Christian devotion. Cimabue's contributions to the history of art thus can finally be recognized for their wide-ranging scope and impact within the rapidly-evolving religious culture of the late thirteenth century.
Holly Flora is Associate Professor of Art History at Tulane University. A specialist in Italian art of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, she is the author of The Devout Belief of the Imagination: the Paris Meditationes Vitae Christi and Female Franciscan Spirituality in Trecento Italy (Brepols, 2009), as well as articles in Art History, Gesta, and Studies in Iconography. She is a recent recipient of the Rome Prize (2010-11) and a fellowship at Villa I Tatti (2015-16).
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