MODERN ART

Anno accademico
2023/2024 Programmi anni precedenti
Titolo corso in inglese
MODERN ART
Codice insegnamento
EM3A13 (AF:444207 AR:250744)
Modalità
In presenza
Crediti formativi universitari
6 su 12 di MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY ART
Livello laurea
Laurea magistrale (DM270)
Settore scientifico disciplinare
L-ART/02
Periodo
3° Periodo
Anno corso
1
Spazio Moodle
Link allo spazio del corso
Questo modulo costituisce la prima parte del corso di Modern e Contemporary Art (12-ECTS) e sviluppa una parte specifica della più ampia ricerca storica del curriculum. and develops a specific subject within the wider art historical research area of the curriculum. Lo studente acquisirà nozioni più avanzate - sulla base di quanto preventivamente imparato - e competenze al fine di comprendere il contesto artistico, sociale e culturale delle corti italiane nel Quattrocento e nel Cinquecento.
Le lezioni avranno come argomenti la storia della moda, dei gioielli, dei mobili e dei principi che governano le varie produzioni artistiche (dipinti, sculture, oggetti ecc.), la loro diffusione e il loro uso, anche con il riferimento a fonti scritte. Lo scopo è imparare a interpretare il linguaggio artistico nel suo ambito storico e di comprenderne le trasformazioni - e le eventuali deformazioni - attraverso il cambio del gusto o delle strutture politiche e sociali.
I criteri e gli strumenti metodologici che lo studente apprenderà a utilizzare potranno essere applicati in caso di altri contesti nazionali o internazionali anche nei secoli successivi. Il momento storico su cui si concentra il corso (il Rinascimento) è di speciale rilevanza nel recente e vivace dibattito sul suo impatto e sulla persistenza nel nostro contesto contemporaneo e imprenditoriale (Entrepreneurial Renaissance).
Notions

Critical “reading” of the works of art, in order to investigate, interpret and decipher the material culture of the Renaissance, seen as a mirror of a social and cultural system and its complex structure. The aim is to provide the critical tools for better understanding the role of the artwork as a response to a cultural need.

Skills

State-of-the-art critical vocabulary that will allow you to develop complex argumentations, as well as analyses, and assess different contexts, figures and artworks (philology of the visual sign, iconography, inferential criticism and cultural studies).

Competences

Capacity to identify and define contexts and periods for the management of permanent and temporary exhibitions; connecting the outstanding elements of an art-historical tradition to the current evolution of a territory by combining humanities, economics and management; establishing original connections between the “modernity” of the Renaissance and contemporary challenges.
Adequate knowledge of Italian art history, in particular of the Renaissance era from the late 14th to the early 16th Century
Works of Art as consumer goods and as narratives: “Material Renaissance” includes the fashion of painted marriage chests in the 15th and early 16th centuries (which in their shape and painted subjects respond to specific social structures and family relations); the invention of the “study” (“studiolo”) and its furniture; the interpretation of jewellery and fashion in portraiture; armor; oriental carpets in paintings; furs and their consumption, and much more. Renaissance paintings, sculptures, art objects speak of their patrons, of men and women who commissioned, admired and used them.
Lectures notes;
Stephen J. Campbell, Michael Cole, Italian Renaissance Art, pp.174-199; 202-231
For each class all readings (short essays and articles, c. 15-20 pages, in PDF) will be uploaded on Moodle.

Further readings:
Before each class a short related reading will be uploaded on Moodle
The list follows:
1) E. Welch, Art and Society in Italy 1350-1500, Oxford 1997, pp. 103-129
2) Campbell, Stephen John, Mantegna’s Camera Picta: Visuality and Pathos, in “Art history”, 37.2014, 2, pp. 314-332
3) C. Paolini, Il cassone, un arredo nella casa del Rinascimento, in Virtù d’amore.Pittura nuziale nel Quattrocento fiorentino, catalogo della mostra a cura di Caudio Paolini, Daniela Parenti, Ludovica Sebregondi, Firenze 2010, pp. 51-59
4) Leah R. Clark, Collecting, exchange, and sociability in the Renaissance studiolo, in “Journal of the History of Collections”,vol. 25 no. 2 (2013) pp. 171–184
5) Claudia Kryza-Gersch, The Production of Multiple Small Bronzes in the Italian Renaissance- When, Where and Why (I), in “Ricche Minere”, 1, 2014, pp. 21-40
6) Stephen Scher, The currency of fame: Portrait medals of the Renaissance, New York Frick Coll, 1994. Introduction
7) Patricia Lee Rubin, Understanding Renaissance Portraiture, in The Renaissance Portrait from Donatello to Bellini, catalogo della mostra a cura di Keith Christiansen e Stefan Weppelman, New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2011, pp. 2-25.
8) Timothy McCall, Brilliant bodies: Material culture and the Adornment of Men in North Italy’s Quattrocento Courts, in “I Tatti Studies”, vol. 16, nn. 1-2, 2013, pp. 445-490.
9) Evelyn Welch, Art on the edge: hair and hands in Renaissance Italy, in “Renaissance Studies”, Vol. 23 No. 3, 2008, pp. 241-268
Or
Emanuele Lugli, The Hair is Full of Snares. Botticelli’s and Boccaccio’s Wayward Erotic Gaze, in “Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorisches Institutes in Florenz”, 2, 2019, pp. 203-233
10) Tawny Sherrill, Fleas, fur and fashion: "zibellini" as luxury accessories of the Renaissance, in “Medieval clothing and textiles”, 2. 2006, pp. 121-150
11) Rosamund Mack, Bazaar to Piazza. Islamic trade and Italian art, 1300-1600, Berkeley and Los Angeles 2002, pp. 149-170
Final paper, based on the lectures’ notes and on the readings provided for each class. It will be followed by a short discussion of the paper with the student. To complete the papers the students will also have to consult websites of the most important museums worldwide, a few bibliographical resources and the notes from the lectures. Attendance and active participation in seminars will also be assessed.
The students must complete the exams within the Academic year
The 12-credits exam in Modern and Contemporary Art consists of two parts, each of 6 credits. The second part (Contemporary Art) is taught by professor Matteo Bertelè. The student earns 12 credits by passing both partial tests, taken in the order in which he prefers. The final grade comes from the average of the two partial grades. Both partial exam tests must be passed within the same academic year, under penalty of forfeiture of the partial credits accrued.
Classroom teaching; sharing of analyses, tools and case studies; two lectures by internationally renown experts and museum managers. PPT with the images shown during class will be uploaded on Moodle within 24 hours.
Inglese
scritto
Il programma è ancora provvisorio e potrà subire modifiche.
Data ultima modifica programma: 19/02/2024