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Bravura

Virtuosity and Ambition in Early Modern European Painting

Nicola Suthor

$115

Hardback

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English
Princeton University Press
12 April 2021
The first major history of the bravura movement in European painting

The painterly style known as bravura emerged in sixteenth-century Venice and spread throughout Europe during the seventeenth century. While earlier artistic movements presented a polished image of the artist by downplaying the creative process, bravura celebrated a painter's di

By:  
Imprint:   Princeton University Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 267mm,  Width: 203mm, 
ISBN:   9780691204581
ISBN 10:   0691204586
Pages:   304
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Nicola Suthor is professor of art history at Yale University. She is the author of Rembrandt’s Roughness (Princeton).

Reviews for Bravura: Virtuosity and Ambition in Early Modern European Painting

Suthor invigorates this subject in myriad ways, not least by the sheer verve of her writing and the ambition of her project. The book is itself a bravura performance, galloping through several centuries of European art history with considerable wit and erudition. ---Alexander Marr, Apollo Magazine [A] pioneering book. . . . this brilliant and well-illustrated book confirms that bravura was one of the most cognitively demanding techniques of Renaissance painting. The brilliance of Suthor's analysis lies in her fresh terminology and perceptive language of description of even the smallest and most easily overlooked details of composition, and in her critical ability to relate such intricacies to larger issues taken up in paintings and in criticism. She writes in engaging, precise language, and makes persuasive connections with contemporary art criticism and modern aesthetics and cultural theory. ---Goran Stanivukovic, Renaissance and Reformation Bravura surveys the breadth of meaning that bravura conveys, probing the subtleties of the concept from multiple viewpoints. . . . This breadth, which makes it possible to see patterns and similarities over centuries and national boundaries, is refreshing in our age of narrowly defined specialist studies and helps us see the consistency over longer periods in European art, something that is often lost in our focus on differences. . . . [Suthor's] skill at integrating theory and practice is commendable and provides a service to the theorists and biographers who were artists themselves, reminding those who would study paintings in isolation from the ideas valued by their makers that they do so at serious peril. ---Janis Bell, Renaissance Quarterly


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