Academic literature on the topic 'Francesco Primaticcio'

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Journal articles on the topic "Francesco Primaticcio"

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Hopkins, Andrew, Sabine Frommel, and Flaminia Bardati. "Francesco Primaticcio architetto." Sixteenth Century Journal 37, no. 2 (July 1, 2006): 514. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/20477898.

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Fiorenza, Giancarlo. "Penelope’s Web: Francesco Primaticcio’s Epic Revision at Fontainebleau*." Renaissance Quarterly 59, no. 3 (2006): 795–827. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ren.2008.0370.

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Francesco Primaticcio designed his celebrated Galerie d’Ulysse at Fontainebleau (now destroyed) at a time when the epic genre was being updated and redefined. One of the most popular scenes from the gallery, Ulysses and Penelope recounting their adventures to one another in bed (from book 23 of theOdyssey),was adapted and revised in an independent composition by Primaticcio himself:Ulysses and Penelope(Toledo Museum of Art, ca. 1560). In contrast to the Fontainebleau mural, the artist’s self-conscious, refined pictorial language for his canvas converts epic energy into lyric sentimentality. As a result, Penelope becomes the central focus of the new composition. Through the language of gesture the painting stresses such themes as beauty and desire, and further employs such prized poetic devices as reversal (peripeteia) and recognition (anagnorisis). By responding to the formal prescriptions of both the epic and romance genres, Primaticcio exploits the expressive and visual potential of the Homeric episode in an utterly novel way. The painting opens up questions into ways of reading, viewing, and interpreting mythic subject matter in sixteenth-century France.
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Karmon, David. "Francesco Primaticcio, architetto Sabine Frommel Flaminia Bardati." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 65, no. 3 (September 2006): 437–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25068301.

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Croizat-Glazer, Yassana. "The Role of Ancient Egypt in Masquerades at the Court of François Ier*." Renaissance Quarterly 66, no. 4 (2013): 1206–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/675091.

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AbstractThis essay examines the role of ancient Egypt in courtly masquerades under François Ier (r. 1515–47). It opens with an analysis of the iconography of a sphinx costume that was designed by Francesco Primaticcio (1504/05–1570) and worn by the king and one of his favorite courtiers, Cardinal Jean de Lorraine (1498–1550), at a wedding celebration held in 1546. Two other costume drawings by the same artist are discussed next, and the first printed French translation of Horapollo’s Hieroglyphica, which was published in Paris in 1543, is identified as their source. In examining their strange aesthetic and multiple layers of meaning, this study considers how these costumes were symptomatic of a broader French Renaissance fascination with concealed truth and how, as conveyors of veiled messages, they were meant to spark lofty discussions and demonstrate the French court’s sophistication.
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Fadda, Elisabetta. "La circolazione dei modelli: calchi da Michelangelo tra Emilia e Veneto, nella seconda metà del Cinquecento." 28 | 2019, no. 1 (December 11, 2019). http://dx.doi.org/10.30687/va/2385-2720/2019/01/004.

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In Reggio Emilia, the sculptor Prospero Spani, also known as Clemente (1516-1584), created two statues representing Adam and on the facade of the cathedral. Along with Saint Daria and Saint Crisanto, they were both commissioned in 1552. The two statues indisputably draw inspiration from Dawn and Dusk, which are part of the monument dedicated to Lorenzo de’ Medici in the New Sacristy of San Lorenzo in Florence, work of Michelangelo Buonarroti. In January 1892, Eva’s leg by Prospero Clemente broke and fell to the ground. During the restoration, it was noticed that the leg and all other statues were empty inside. There is no formal documentary evidence of Clemente travelling to Florence, where Buonarroti's New Sacristy was opened to the public in 1556 and where, only later on, by the will of Cosimo I, were carried out some engravings representing the whole composition. Despite the existence of other drawings, casts were mainly responsible for spreading Michelangelo’s inventions for the Medici tombs. In the sixteenth century, it was only possible to talk of a culture of casts after 1540 King Francis I Valois’ initiative to ask Francesco Primaticcio – who was already occupied working for him at the decoration of Fontainebleau – to procure the moulds of Rome’s best ancient statues in order to reproduce them. Among the commissioned casts there were also those from Michelangelo, an artist who was extremely admired by the French. As known, masterpieces realised for the King of France had an immediate impact in Italy, which was primarily possible thanks to Primaticcio’s numerous trips in Emilia, where the painter had his own home and used to recruit his collaborators.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Francesco Primaticcio"

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BALDI, VALENTINA. "Primaticcio, Allori, Parigi: «Disegni di Vestiture per Deità, Virtù mascherate ed altri oggetti» nel fondo Palatino della Biblioteca Nazionale." Doctoral thesis, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/2158/799915.

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Schedatura e analisi dei figurini per feste in maschera e spettacoli teatrali conservati presso il fondo Palatino della Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale di Firenze (Palat. C.B.III.53/II, cc. 38-73, 75-100).
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Books on the topic "Francesco Primaticcio"

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Francesco Primaticcio architetto. Milano: Electa, 2005.

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Primaticcio e l'arte di gettare le statue di bronzo: Il mito della "seconda Roma" nella Francia del XVI secolo. Roma: UniversItalia, 2010.

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Antonio Bolognini Amorini (Marchese ). Vita Del Celebre Pittore Francesco Primaticcio... Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2022.

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Taylor, Sean Joseph. The use of drawings in the work of Francesco Primaticcio, 1504-1570. 1987.

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