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OverviewIn this engaging account, now in paperback, Bernadine Barnes uses new research to show how Michelangelo's art was seen in its own time. The original setting is reconstructed for works that have been moved, modified or left incomplete. Michelangelo's consideration of his audience changed throughout his career: sometimes he produced work for conventional religious settings and at other times he was given unprecedented freedom by open-minded patrons. This book brings the viewer back into the development of Michelangelo's work and gives emphasis to the differences between viewers in specific settings. Michelangelo lived in a time when the development of prints and published art criticism changed the nature of the viewing public in ways that foreshadow our own media culture. This book encourages today's viewers to take a fresh look at Michelangelo's work. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Bernadine BarnesPublisher: Reaktion Books Imprint: Reaktion Books ISBN: 9781836391616ISBN 10: 1836391617 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 11 August 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsIntroduction 1 The Artist in Search of an Audience 2 The Heroic Body 3 Visions of Majesty: Projects for Pope Julius 11 4 Power and Illusion: Commissions for the Medici 5 Painting the Visionary Experience: Frescoes for Pope Paul 111 6 Love, Desire and Politics: Works for Private Viewers 7 Vision and Space: Michelangelo’s Roman Architecture 8 Last Works Conclusion references Select Bibliography Acknowledgements Photo Acknowledgements IndexReviewsBarnes presents a lucid, readable, and jargon-free account of Michelangelo's art with a particular emphasis on understanding it in light of his viewers. The book provides a concise, reliable history of Michelangelo's major works and the Renaissance context in which it was produced. Well illustrated, with many color plates, it is a welcome addition to the Michelangelo literature and students will be well served by this up-to-date and reasoned approach. * Victor Coonin, Professor and Chair of Art and Art History, Rhodes College * How did individuals and society at large respond to Michelangelo's art? This is the central question explored in Bernadine Barnes refreshingly original examination of Michelangelo's life, works, and varied audiences. Barnes leaves aside the heroic but fictionalized story of Michelangelo the lone genius to focus on the private individuals and viewing public who were highly attentive to how the artists creations were seen and displayed, praised and criticized. * William E. Wallace, Washington University in St. Louis * This important book builds upon Barnes earlier research to integrate the Renaissance viewer more fully into study of Michelangelo's art works. Compiling evidence from multiple sources including contracts, prints, contemporary accounts, iconography, technical studies, and site analysis it offers a lucid reconstruction of the material conditions of artistic creation and reception. This approach, which also understands audiences to occupy variously ideal, real, pious, intimate, fixed and shifting viewpoints, situates Michelangelo's enduring achievements more securely in time and space. * Kim Butler Wingfield, American University * 'Barnes presents a lucid, readable, and jargon-free account of Michelangelo's art with a particular emphasis on understanding it in light of his viewers. The book provides a concise, reliable history of Michelangelos major works and the Renaissance context in which it was produced. Well illustrated, with many color plates, it is a welcome addition to the Michelangelo literature and students will be well served by this up-to-date and reasoned approach.' –Victor Coonin, The James F. Ruffin Professor of Art History, Rhodes College 'How did individuals and society at large respond to Michelangelos art? This is the central question explored in Bernadine Barnes refreshingly original examination of Michelangelos life, works, and varied audiences. Barnes leaves aside the heroic but fictionalized story of Michelangelo the lone genius to focus on the private individuals and viewing public who were highly attentive to how the artists creations were seen and displayed, praised and criticized.' – William E. Wallace, Washington University in St. Louis 'This important book builds upon Barnes earlier research to integrate the Renaissance viewer more fully into study of Michelangelos art works. Compiling evidence from multiple sources including contracts, prints, contemporary accounts, iconography, technical studies, and site analysis it offers a lucid reconstruction of the material conditions of artistic creation and reception. This approach, which also understands audiences to occupy variously ideal, real, pious, intimate, fixed and shifting viewpoints, situates Michelangelos enduring achievements more securely in time and space.' – Kim Butler Wingfield, American University ""Barnes presents a lucid, readable, and jargon-free account of Michelangelo's art with a particular emphasis on understanding it in light of his viewers. The book provides a concise, reliable history of Michelangelo's major works and the Renaissance context in which it was produced. Well illustrated, with many color plates, it is a welcome addition to the Michelangelo literature and students will be well served by this up-to-date and reasoned approach."" - Victor Coonin, Professor and Chair of Art and Art History, Rhodes College ""How did individuals and society at large respond to Michelangelo's art? This is the central question explored in Bernadine Barnes refreshingly original examination of Michelangelo's life, works, and varied audiences. Barnes leaves aside the heroic but fictionalized story of Michelangelo the lone genius to focus on the private individuals and viewing public who were highly attentive to how the artists creations were seen and displayed, praised and criticized."" - William E. Wallace, Washington University in St. Louis ""This important book builds upon Barnes earlier research to integrate the Renaissance viewer more fully into study of Michelangelo's art works. Compiling evidence from multiple sources including contracts, prints, contemporary accounts, iconography, technical studies, and site analysis it offers a lucid reconstruction of the material conditions of artistic creation and reception. This approach, which also understands audiences to occupy variously ideal, real, pious, intimate, fixed and shifting viewpoints, situates Michelangelo's enduring achievements more securely in time and space."" - Kim Butler Wingfield, American University Author InformationBernadine Barnes is Professor of Renaissance Art History at Wake Forest University, North Carolina. Her previous publications include Michelangelo's Last Judgment: The Renaissance Response (1998) and Michelangelo in Print: Reproductions as Response in the Sixteenth Century (2010). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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