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California State University, Northridge
CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, NORTHRIDGE The Palazzo del Te: Art, Power, and Giulio Romano’s Gigantic, yet Subtle, Game in the Age of Charles V and Federico Gonzaga A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements For the degree of Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies with emphases in Art History and Political Science By Diana L. Michiulis December 2016 The thesis of Diana L. Michiulis is approved: ___________________________________ _____________________ Dr. Jean-Luc Bordeaux Date ___________________________________ _____________________ Dr. David Leitch Date ___________________________________ _____________________ Dr. Margaret Shiffrar, Chair Date California State University, Northridge ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to convey my deepest, sincere gratitude to my Thesis Committee Chair, Dr. Margaret Shiffrar, for all of her guidance, insights, patience, and encourage- ments. A massive "merci beaucoup" to Dr. Jean-Luc Bordeaux, without whom completion of my Master’s degree thesis would never have been fulfilled. It was through Dr. Bordeaux’s leadership, patience, as well as his tremendous knowledge of Renaissance art, Mannerist art, and museum art collections that I was able to achieve this ultimate goal in spite of numerous obstacles. My most heart-felt, gigantic appreciation to Dr. David Leitch, for his leadership, patience, innovative ideas, vast knowledge of political-theory, as well as political science at the intersection of aesthetic theory. Thank you also to Dr. Owen Doonan, for his amazing assistance with aesthetic theory and classical mythology. I am very grateful as well to Dr. Mario Ontiveros, for his advice, passion, and incredible knowledge of political art and art theory. And many thanks to Dr. Peri Klemm, for her counsel and spectacular help with the role of "spectacle" in art history. -
La Galerie De François I”
Trinity College Trinity College Digital Repository Senior Theses and Projects Student Scholarship Spring 2020 Enigma and Assumption: A Foundational Overview of the History, Legacy and Famous Names associated with “La Galerie de François I” Sophie Klieger [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/theses Part of the Architectural History and Criticism Commons, Art Practice Commons, Historic Preservation and Conservation Commons, Interior Architecture Commons, and the Painting Commons Recommended Citation Klieger, Sophie, "Enigma and Assumption: A Foundational Overview of the History, Legacy and Famous Names associated with “La Galerie de François I”". Senior Theses, Trinity College, Hartford, CT 2020. Trinity College Digital Repository, https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/theses/840 Enigma and Assumption: The Galerie de François I 1 Enigma and Assumption: A Foundational Overview of the History, Legacy and Famous Names associated with “La Galerie de François I” by Sophie Klieger Trinity College Department of Art History Thesis Advisor: Professor Jean Cadogan In Fulfillment of the requirements of the Degree of the Bachelors of Arts Enigma and Assumption: The Galerie de François I 2 Table of Contents Abstract .............................................................................................................................. 3 Chapter I: King Francis I………………………………………………...………………..4 Chapter 2: Rosso Fiorentino……………………………………………………………..17 Chapter 3: Giorgio Vasari…………………………………………………….………….36 -
The Image of a Queen: the Representation of Catherine De’ Medici As
THE IMAGE OF A QUEEN: THE REPRESENTATION OF CATHERINE DE’ MEDICI AS PENELOPE IN THE GALERIE D’ULYSSE by ELIZABETH LEHMAN MILLER (Under the Direction of Shelley Zuraw) ABSTRACT This study explores the patronage and significance of the five sixteenth-century fresco scenes illustrating the reunion of Ulysses and Penelope designed by Francesco Primaticcio in the no longer extant Galerie d’Ulysse at Fontainebleau. Correlations are drawn between the imagery represented in the frescoes and two other works of art from Primaticcio’s oeuvre: the tomb of King Henri II and Queen Catherine de’ Medici of France and a painting titled Ulysses and Penelope in the Toledo Museum of Art. Also examined in relation to the frescoes are Catherine de’ Medici’s efforts to create a positive public image of herself as Regent of France following the death of Henri II. It is argued that Homer’s Penelope was a suitable mythological character with whom Catherine de’ Medici could identify; and that the Galerie d’Ulysse frescoes of Ulysses and Penelope were a means of public propaganda for the recently widowed queen- regent. INDEX WORDS: Galerie d’Ulysse, Francesco Primaticcio, Fontainebleau, King Henri II of France, Queen Catherine de’ Medici of France, Tomb, Ulysses, Penelope, Reunion THE IMAGE OF A QUEEN: THE REPRESENTATION OF CATHERINE DE’ MEDICI AS PENELOPE IN THE GALERIE D’ULYSSE by ELIZABETH LEHMAN MILLER B.A., The University of the South, 2004 A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of The University of Georgia in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for -
Francesco Primaticcio's Epic Revision at Fontainebleau
Penelope’s Web: Francesco Primaticcio’s Epic Revision at Fontainebleau* by GIANCARLO FIORENZA 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 the Odyssey), was adapted and revised in an independent composition by Primaticcio himself: Ulysses and Penelope (Toledo Museum of Art, ca. 1560). In contrast to the Fontaine bleau 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. hen Marguerite de Navarre (1492–1549), sister of King Francis I W (1494–1547), visited the royal chateau of Fontainebleau in 1542, she remarked that the absence of the king during her stay dulled the charm of her experience: “because to see your buildings without you, it is a dead body, and to look at your buildings without hearing your intention about them, it is like reading Hebrew.”1 Given the highly allusive character of Fontainebleau, with its distinctive language of interior decoration that emphasized myth and classicizing ornament realized in a variety of media, it is not surprising that Marguerite would desire princely illumination. -
Disegno: Drawing in Europe 1520-1600 November 13, 2012 to February 3, 2013 the J
Disegno: Drawing in Europe 1520-1600 November 13, 2012 to February 3, 2013 The J. Paul Getty Museum at the Getty Center 5 5 recto 1. François Gentil 2. Pontormo (Jacopo Carucci) French, 1510 - 1588 Italian (Florentine), 1494 - 1557 DISEG After Francesco Primaticcio NO Male Nude, 1518 Italian, 1504 - 1570 Red heightened with white chalk DISEG NO Wounded Hector Carried into Troy, About 1540-50 38.9 x 24 cm (15 5/16 x 9 7/16 in.) Engraving The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles Unframed: 25.4 x 38.3 cm (10 x 15 1/16 in.) 87.GB.95 Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Mary Stansbury Ruiz Bequest L.2012.3 5 5 recto 3. Pontormo (Jacopo Carucci) 4. Parmigianino (Francesco Mazzola) Italian (Florentine), 1494 - 1557 Italian, 1503 - 1540 DISEG DISEG NO NO Seated Male Nude, 1520 Saint Jerome, About 1526-27 Red chalk Pen and brown ink with brown wash, heightened with 29.4 x 20 cm (11 9/16 x 7 7/8 in.) white gouache The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles 21.6 x 24.3 cm (8 1/2 x 9 9/16 in.) 90.GB.34 The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles 84.GA.9 November 21, 2012 Page 1 of 8 Additional information about some of these works of art can be found by searching getty.edu at http://www.getty.edu/art/gettyguide/ © 2012 J. Paul Getty Trust 5 5 recto 5. Giulio Romano (Giulio Pippi) 6. Parmigianino (Francesco Mazzola) Italian (Roman), before 1499 - 1546 Italian, 1503 - 1540 DISEG DISEG NO Victory, Janus, Chronos, and Gaea, About 1532-34 NO Madonna and Child, About 1535 Pen and brown ink, brown wash, and black chalk 10.2 x 8.6 cm (4 x 3 3/8 in.) 37.5 x 31.8 cm (14 3/4 x 12 1/2 in.) The J. -
Early Years: Family Background, Education, Giulio Romano
Chapter � Early Years: Family Background, Education, Giulio Romano 1.1 Family Background On the seventh of September of 1459, according to the contemporary chron- icler Andrea Schivenoglia, the Duke of ‘Clenij’ or ‘Clunii’—in fact Johann i, Duke of Cleves—arrived in Mantua representing Philip the Good, Duke of Bur- gundy, at the Mantuan Council presided over by Pope Pius ii. During his visit he was lodged in the house belonging to the massaro of Mantua, an important financial officer of this small but powerful North-Italian state.1 The Duke’s host, Vivaldo della Strata, belonged to a family whose common ancestor, Lorenzo, had in 1228 been called from Brescia to serve as podestà of Mantua. In this he followed a tradition of his family, many members of which fulfilled similar functions in Lombardy and Piedmont.2 Until their extinction in an outbreak 1 Vivaldo Strada was elected Councillor and massarius of the Comune of Mantua in 1445; he died in 1475, cf. Piccoli 1988, who quotes the Mantuan chronicle Andrea Schivenoglia: ‘E che venuto allora ambasciatore del duca di Borgogna il duca di Clunii, questo foe alogato in casa de Vivaldo Strada da drè la via de San Dominico andando verso San Christophora’; a similar passage is quoted by Carlo d’Arco in the entry on the Stradas in his manuscript Annotazioni genealogiche di famiglie mantovane che possono servire alla esatta compilazione della storia di queste (ASMn, Documenti patrii 220, vol. vii, pp. 65–75); but it cannot be found in D’Arco’s own edition of Schivenoglia (D’Arco 1857a, the relevant passage on p. -
View Checklist
The Natural World, the Body, and the Divine, February 3, 2006-April 16, 2006 A vigorous rediscovery of natural forms characterized Western art from the Renaissance through the 18th century. By the early 1400s, artists in Italy and Northern Europe had begun to abandon the flat, frontal, simplified forms that had characterized Gothic painting and sculpture, replacing this visual language with new ways of representing nature, the human body, and the concept of "the divine." Over the next five centuries, classical forms related to ancient Greek and Roman sculpture would dominate representations of the human figure. Religious subjects depicting Old and New Testament characters were as likely to reveal physical aspects of the figure in motion as were narrative depictions based on legends of pagan gods. Landscape, which had not previously been valued as a subject in itself, took on greater importance as artists demonstrated the interdependence of man and his physical environment. This selection from the Museum's permanent collection includes both frequently exhibited objects and works that are rarely on view. Together they suggest the variety of technical, compositional, and narrative solutions that "Old Master" artists used to represent nature in art during this long and fertile period. CHECKLIST OF THE EXHIBITION Domenico Gagini, Italian, ca. 1425-1492; ca. 1420 - 1492 Antonello Gagini, Italian, 1478-1536 Tabernacle, ca. 1460-1470 Marble Gift of Mrs. Gustav Radeke 06.057 A ciborium is an architectural structure designed to frame an object of veneration. In this example, which would have been installed against a wall in a chapel, the ciborium takes the form of a marble sculpture. -
Prints at the Court of Fontainebleau, C. 1542-47
the hollstein journal november 2017 Although called the Hollstein Journal, this issue is dedicated to our forthcoming publication in our series Studies in Prints and Printmaking . It has been over ten years since our last book in the series was published, the well-received catalogue Rembrandt as an etcher . We are happy to announce that the seventh publication in Studies in Prints and Printmaking will now make its appearance, the long-awaited Prints at the Court of Fontainebleau, c. 1542–47 by the independent art historian Catherine Jenkins. This three-volume book will be published in the first half of December 2017 . Frits Garritsen Director fig. 1 prints at the court of fontainebleau, c. 1542-47 The chateau of Fontainebleau, transformed into a Studies in Prints and Printmaking series, examines the magnificent palace during the reign of François I er , etchings, engravings and woodcuts that were was the birthplace of many of the greatest artistic executed at the French court in a spurt of activity innovations of the French Renaissance. The highly that lasted approximately five years. Known wrought, ornate decoration conceived for the collectively as the School of Fontainebleau, these interiors by the Italian artists Rosso Fiorentino and prints are particularly intriguing, not least for their Francesco Primaticcio would have a profound effect lack of identifying inscriptions, their unusual, often on the course of French art. The prints that were amateurish appearance, and the total absence of produced at the palace in the 1540 s became one of documentary evidence on the circumstances of their the main vehicles for the dissemination of this production. -
My Completed Work Wednesday, September 12, 2012 4:49 PM
My Completed Work Wednesday, September 12, 2012 4:49 PM When you are complete, this page should contain… - Cover Page - Report - Bibliography Clear introduction 8HP Page 1 Clear introduction Good details 8HP Page 2 How did Catherine have a lasting impact today? Did her changes to gov't matter today? Is she a role model for other women leaders? 8HP Page 3 8HP Page 4 8HP Page 5 Linh Growing up Achievement Tuesday, September 11, 2012 Legacy 10:56 AM Source Source Material Point Form Notes (Copy / Paste from original, make sure to keep web URL) (key information!) 1 Italian-born French queen, regent and mother of three kings of France. She was a powerful • Powerful influence in 16th century France (Wars of Religion). influence in 16th century France, particularly during the Wars of Religion. • Born 13 April,1519. - Florence • Full name: Caterina Maria Romola di Lorenzo de Medici. Caterina Maria Romola di Lorenzo de Medici was born in Florence on 13 April 1519. Her father • Father: Lorenzo de Medici - Duke of Urbino and ruler of Florence. was Lorenzo de Medici, Duke of Urbino and ruler of Florence and her mother was Madeleine de la Tour d'Auvergne, cousin of Francis I, King of France. • Mother: Madeleine de la Tour d'Auvergn - Francis I (King of France)'s cousin. • Two weeks old parent died. Catherine's mother died when she was two-weeks-old and her father soon afterwards. In 1533, • 1533 arranged marriage duke of Orleans (second son of France's king) - age 14. at the age of 14, Catherine's uncle Pope Clement VII arranged her marriage to the duke of • Ten years after married have first child. -
ITALIAN RENAISSANCE DRAWINGS from the Musee Du Louvre, Paris Roman, Tuscan, and Emilian Schools 1500-1575
ITALIAN RENAISSANCE DRAWINGS from the Musee du Louvre, Paris Roman, Tuscan, and Emilian Schools 1500-1575 The Metr()politan Museum of Art October 11,1974 - January 5,1975 Copyright © 1974 by The Metropolitan Museum of Art Design by Peter Oldenburg Composition by Finn Typographic Service, Inc. Printing by The Meriden Gravure Company LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION DATA Bacou, Roseline. Italian Renaissance drawings from the Musee du Lou vre, Paris: Roman, Tuscan, and Emilian Schools, 1500 1575· "Catalogue notices by Roseline Bacou and Fran<;:oise Viatte." Includes bibliographies. 1. Drawings, Renaissance-Exhibitions. I. Viatte, Fran <;:oise, joint author. II. Paris. Musee national du Louvre. III. New York (City). Metropolitan Museum of Art. IV. Title. NC255·B32 74-1214 1 ISBN 0-87099-094-2 Preface hese beilUtiful Italian Renaissance drawings, lent to us by the Cabinet des Des sins of the Musee du Louvre, come as the latest wave of French generosity to The Metropolitan Museum of Art. They follow upon the glorious tapestries lent to us earlier this year for the exhibition Masterpieces of Tapestry from the Fourteenth to the Sixteenth Century. Loan exhibitions of such great works of art are the first posi tive results of recent agreements between the National Museums of France and the MetropolHan Museum intended to facilitate the exchange of works of art and of personnel between France and America. In October, 1973, the Metropolitan Museum sent to Paris an exhibition that in cluded its finest drawings by French artists of the nineteenth centuryi the present splendid selection of drawings by Italian Renaissance masters from the Louvre is France's response to New York's loan to Paris. -
The French Renaissance
The royal Chateau de Chambord in the Loire Valley is one of the most recognizable chateaux in the world because of its very distinct French renaissance architecture Delayed because of Black Death and Hundred Years War French invasion of Italy Proximity of Burgundy Court Papal Court in Avignon Religious shifts Behind in painting and architecture 1435: The Medici family dynasty begins in France 1453: Fall of Constantinople & end of the Hundred Years War 1468: Gutenberg invented the printing press 1492: Christopher Columbus discovered the Americas 1494-1559: Italian Wars: France and Austria fight over Italian territories (Charles VIII invades Italy) 1519: Leonardo da Vinci dies in the arms of Francois I 1562-1598: The Wars of Religion: Catholics killed Huguenots (members of the Protestant Reformed Church of France) aka French Calvinists 1572: St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre 1589-1593: Henri IV converts France to Catholicism, ending the Wars of Religion 1598: The Edict of Nantes is signed Born to the Medici family of Florence, Italy Her parents died shortly after her birth and she became the sole heiress to everything in her parents’ possession Arranged marriage to Henry of Orleans (the French did not like her very much, with the exception of King Francis I) Even as the Queen of France, not much control over King Henry II rather his mistress, Diane de Poitiers, had the power 1559: King Henry II died in a tournament and Catherine’s eldest son Francis II came to the throne Francis II ruled for 17 months then died, Charles IX came to throne, then Henry III did She overcame the religious wars and the hatred that the French had for her with grace and still upheld the necessary power He was a goldsmith First assembled in Germany Gutenberg was the first in W. -
Comunicato Stampa
Bologna, Palazzo di Re Enzo e del Podestà - Dal 30 Gennaio al 10 Aprile 2005 Comunicato Stampa Dalle sale del Museo del Louvre la mostra dedicata a Primaticcio approda a Bologna, città natale dell’artista, nelle prestigiose sale di Palazzo di Re Enzo e del Podestà, dal 30 gennaio al 10 aprile 2005. La mostra Primatice. Maître de Fontainebleau, curata dal Louvre e prodotta dalla Réunion des Musées Nationaux, è stata fortemente voluta dal Comune di Bologna per rendere omaggio ad uno dei suoi artisti più grandi, portavoce internazionale dell’arte italiana del Cinquecento. L’edizione bolognese, promossa da Comune di Bologna, Regione Emilia Romagna, Provincia di Bologna e Comitato per le celebrazioni del V centenario dalla nascita del Parmigianino, con l’eccezionale collaborazione del Museo del Louvre e con il sostegno di UniCredit Banca, ha assunto il titolo di Primaticcio (1504-1570). Un Bolognese alla corte di Francia. La mostra presenta alcune varianti tra cui una trentina di pregiati disegni dell’artista non esposti a Parigi, oltre ad un nuovo catalogo edito da 5 Continents, e si configura come un inedito per l’Italia in una fase di particolare attenzione ai maggiori artisti del manierismo a partire dal Parmigianino. D’altro canto nessuna mostra monografica era mai stata dedicata a Primaticcio né a Parigi né a Bologna; l’ultima esposizione collettiva in cui figurava risale al 1972, allestita al Grand Palais di Parigi, dal titolo L’École de Fontainebleau. L’attuale esposizione a cura di Dominique Cordellier, Conservateur en Chef del Dipartimento di Arte Grafica del Louvre, si è avvalsa di un comitato scientifico di esperti internazionali; essa raccoglie un numero considerevole di opere provenienti dai maggiori musei del mondo, tra cui il Louvre, la Bibliothèque Nationale de France, gli Uffizi di Firenze, il Nationalmuseum di Stoccolma, il Toledo Museum of Art, il Kunsthistorisches di Vienna e altri ancora.