Scott Nethersole is Senior Lecturer in Italian Renaissance Art, 1400a 1500, at The Courtauld Institute of Art, London. He is the author of Art and Violence in Early Renaissance Florence and has published widely on 15th-century Florence.
"In this vivid account Scott Nethersole examines the remarkable
period of cultural, artistic, and intellectual blossoming in
Florence from the period known as the Early and High Renaissance.
Key works of art-from painting, sculpture, and architecture to
illuminated manuscripts-by artists such as Michelangelo, Donatello,
Botticelli, and Brunelleschi are showcased alongside the unexpected
and less familiar." Creative Quarterly
"Nethersole's thought-provoking analysis reaffirms how crucial
Florentine art was to the dissemination of Renaissance ideas
through-out the Italian peninsula and far beyond." The Art
Newspaper
"This engaging, extensively illustrated book offers an excellent
introduction to the art of 15th-century Florence. Organized by
broad topics-iconography, media and materials, art theory,
patronage, perspective, naturalism, the antique, and reception-the
book offers manageable chapters on various case studies. Nethersole
(Courtauld Institute of Art, London, UK) grounds explanations of
the Florentine Renaissance in careful readings of particular works
of art and their contexts. To take patronage as an example,
Nethersole treats corporate, female, and sociofamilial patronage
separately to tease out how the objectives of these diverse
sponsors and audiences affected the appearance of individual works
and their installations. The author is careful not to make claims
regarding the primacy of the Florentine Renaissance, even as he
reiterates the elements that have made the period attractive to
historians. Unencumbered by scholarly notes (but equipped with an
extensive index and useful bibliography) and written in engaging
and compelling prose, this exemplary book should prove fascinating
to anyone interested in the art of Renaissance Florence or in
larger questions about the history of naturalism, perspective,
religious art and devotion, patronage, or the reception of the
antique." CHOICE, D. N. Dow, Kansas State University
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