This edited volume addresses the circulation of works of art, images, and ideas between the Iberian and Italian world, and the subsequent responses this motion generated.
This edited volume addresses the circulation of works of art, images, and ideas between the Iberian and Italian world and the subsequent responses this motion generated.
Amongst the themes discussed are the concepts of centre and periphery, replicas and alterations, and how items and ideas were reinterpreted. The processes of appropriation and transformation create an artistic geography of identities in which originality can be studied through the processes of assimilation of images shared between Europe, Asia, and America. Chapters challenge the negative conceptualization of copying arguing that the copy is not simply a derivation but a new creation that is shaped by the interests and preferences of the receiver. Similarly, contributors argue for a more nuanced concept of what exactly an artistic centre is.
The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, Renaissance studies, and Iberian studies.
Introduction
1. Italy-Spain in the Renaissance: Model, Active Reception,
Reaction, Rejection
2. Valencia. Art in a Mediterranean Metropolis in the
Fifteenth Century
3. The Road between Vélez Blanco and Murcia: A Southern
Crossroad for the Italo-Spanish Dialogue at the Beginning of the Sixteenth
Century
4. From Donatello to Titian. Notes on Replicating and Re-Reading
Images in Sixteenth-Century Spanish Sculpture
5. Marcantonio Goes Global
6.
The Apocalipsis de San Amadeo from Renaissance Italy to Viceregal America:
Veiling and Revealing Visual Arcanes
7. Reception of Vasari as a Painter: The
Immaculate Conception Outside of Italy
8. From Seville to Lima and Back to
Seville: Two Crucifixions by Juan Martķnez Montańés
9. Three Pistils, Three
Nails. The Passion Flower and the Debate on the Iconography of the
Crucifixion in Early Seventeenth-Century Spain
10. Between Identity and
Transformation: Neapolitan Sculpture in the Hispanic World
Corinna Tania Gallori is researcher for the Swiss National Fund project Building a Renaissance: Networks of Artists and Patrons from Ticino and Lombardy in Rome (1417 1527), based at the Scuola Universitaria Superiore della Svizzera Italiana (SUPSI) of Mendrisio, as well as a member of the Circulation of images in the early modern artistic geographies of the Hispanic World (CIRIMA) research group.
Benito Navarrete Prieto is Full Professor of Art History at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid and the PI of the the Circulation of images in the early modern artistic geographies of the Hispanic World (CIRIMA) research group.