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Green Worlds of Renaissance Venice

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“This wide-ranging exploration of the green world, pastoral, or ‘second nature’ of Venice helps rethink the complex and intricate world of pastoral, its production, and its experience. From palace and villa gardens to paintings, eclogues and plays, and sculptural figures, Jodi Cranston sets out the fictional and the actual modes of pastoralism in the light of both contemporary writers and modern critics who have extended their versions of pastoral.”

—John Dixon Hunt,author of A World of Gardens

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From celebrated gardens in private villas to the paintings and sculptures that adorned palace interiors, Venetians in the sixteenth century conceived of their marine city as dotted with actual and imaginary green spaces. Les mer

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From celebrated gardens in private villas to the paintings and sculptures that adorned palace interiors, Venetians in the sixteenth century conceived of their marine city as dotted with actual and imaginary green spaces. This volume examines how and why this pastoral vision of Venice developed.

Drawing on a variety of primary sources ranging from visual art to literary texts, performances, and urban plans, Jodi Cranston shows how Venetians lived the pastoral in urban Venice. She describes how they created green spaces and enacted pastoral situations through poetic conversations and theatrical performances in lagoon gardens; discusses the island utopias found, invented, and mapped in distant seas; and explores the visual art that facilitated the experience of inhabiting verdant landscapes. Though the greening of Venice was relatively short lived, Cranston shows how the phenomenon had a lasting impact on how other cities, including Paris and London, developed their self-images and how later writers and artists understood and adapted the pastoral mode.

Incorporating approaches from eco-criticism and anthropology, Green Worlds of Renaissance Venice greatly informs our understanding of the origins and development of the pastoral in art history and literature as well as the culture of sixteenth-century Venice. It will appeal to scholars and enthusiasts of sixteenth-century history and culture, the history of urban landscapes, and Italian art.

Detaljer

Forlag
Pennsylvania State University Press
Innbinding
Innbundet
Språk
Engelsk
ISBN
9780271082028
Utgivelsesår
2019
Format
25 x 20 cm

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«

“This wide-ranging exploration of the green world, pastoral, or ‘second nature’ of Venice helps rethink the complex and intricate world of pastoral, its production, and its experience. From palace and villa gardens to paintings, eclogues and plays, and sculptural figures, Jodi Cranston sets out the fictional and the actual modes of pastoralism in the light of both contemporary writers and modern critics who have extended their versions of pastoral.”

—John Dixon Hunt,author of A World of Gardens

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“With elegant concision, Jodi Cranston shows how artists of different facture configured the proximities of urban and green worlds in and about Venice in the quattrocento and cinquecento. Casting an informed and inspired gaze on gardens, landscapes, pastoral and elegiac poetry, vedute, city views, and illustrated books, she reconsiders how Venice led artists to depict and even internalize tensions and shifting lines of division between city, country, and the world at large. Exhaustively researched, Green Worlds is a major contribution both to early modern studies and to a burgeoning and much-needed field of cultural ecology.”

—Tom Conley,author of An Errant Eye: Poetry and Topography in Early Modern France

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“This wide-ranging book, which is Cranston’s third, combines art history, literary theory, and cultural geography to provide a fresh take on the importance of green spaces and the pastoral mode in Renaissance Venice.”

—Chriscinda Henry Renaissance and Reformation

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“This rich and illuminating study bridges a gap in the art-historical scholarship, namely, that of a comprehensive treatment of early Italian pastoral painting that takes into its purview complex associations between and among geographical localities, pastoral poetry, painting, sculpture, and, importantly, both imagined and real green spaces. Cranston’s original and valid insights emerge in every chapter; her range of reference earns her the reader’s confidence, while her handling of the various motives and interpretations of the elusive pastoral ‘mode’ is creative, subtle, and, ultimately, convincing.”

—Kristin Phillips-Court,author of The Perfect Genre: Drama and Painting in Renaissance Italy

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