This highly acclaimed volume examines the one firm bridge between the art of the humanists and the painters of the early Italian Renaissance: what Petrarch and other humanists wrote about painting. Baxandall surveys the mai...

Buy Now From Amazon

This highly acclaimed volume examines the one firm bridge between the art of the humanists and the painters of the early Italian Renaissance: what Petrarch and other humanists wrote about painting. Baxandall surveys the main themes of their art criticism and describes how their language conditioned their insights into painting.


Similar Products

Cellini and the Principles of SculptureWords for Pictures: Seven Papers on Renaissance Art and CriticismSeeing Medieval Art (Rethinking the Middle Ages)Painters and Public Life in Eighteenth-Century ParisThe Moment of Caravaggio (The A. W. Mellon Lectures in the Fine Arts)Picture Theory: Essays on Verbal and Visual RepresentationPower and Pathos: Bronze Sculpture of the Hellenistic WorldAnachronic Renaissance