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Victims and Villains in Vasari's Lives (Bettie Allison Rand Lectures in Art History)

Victims and Villains in Vasari's Lives (Bettie Allison Rand Lectures in Art History)Author: Andrew T. Ladis
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Category: Book

List Price: $39.95
Buy New: $8.15
as of 2/9/2012 01:25 EST details
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Seller: bordeau_books
Sales Rank: 1,148,077

Languages: English (Unknown), English (Original Language), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Pages: 188
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 7 x 0.7

ISBN: 0807831328
EAN: 9780807831328
ASIN: 0807831328

Publication Date: March 10, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days



Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Giorgio Vasari's The Lives of the Artists (1550, 1568) has been a key subject of study for students of the Italian Renaissance over the hundreds of years since its publication. It has maintained a powerful grip on the historical imagination and continues to influence the way scholars treat the Renaissance, its artists, and the entire intellectual enterprise of Western art. Focusing on Vasari's literary and narrative achievements, Andrew Ladis turns to Vasari's villains, rather than his heroes, to demonstrate the biographer's foremost interest in glorifying Michelangelo.

Approaching Lives on Vasari's terms--as the grand story of the rebirth and triumph of art in Italy--Ladis argues that Vasari was not a mere compiler of facts, but a shrewd, self-confident author aware of the power of metaphor. With a literary reading of the text, Ladis analyzes Vasari's motives and methods as an attempt to portray the great Michelangelo as a Christlike exemplum of ultimate light and goodness. Through biographic details both real and invented, Vasari presents all other artists as various players with varying degrees of heroic and villainous value. Antiheroic characters such as Buffalmacco, Lippi, and Castagno, Ladis argues, serve to accentuate the contrasting greatness of Michelangelo.


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