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Giorgio Vasari

Giorgio Vasari (/vəˈsɑːri/, also US: /-ˈzɑːr-, vɑːˈzɑːri/,[1][2][3][4] Italian: [ˈdʒordʒo vaˈzaːri]; 30 July 1511 – 27 June 1574) was an Italian Renaissance painter and architect, who is best known for his work Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects, considered the ideological foundation of all art-historical writing, and still much cited in modern biographies of the many Italian Renaissance artists he covers, including Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo, although he is now regarded as including many factual errors, especially when covering artists from before he was born.

Giorgio Vasari
Self-portrait (c. 1571–74), Uffizi Gallery
Born(1511-07-30)30 July 1511
Arezzo, Republic of Florence
Died27 June 1574(1574-06-27) (aged 62)
Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany
EducationAndrea del Sarto
Known for
  • Painting
  • architecture
  • art history
Notable workThe Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects
MovementRenaissance
SpouseNiccolosa Bacci

Giorgio was a Mannerist painter who was highly regarded both as a painter and architect in his day, but rather less so in later centuries. He was effectively what would now be called the minister of culture to the Medici court in Florence, and the Lives promoted, with enduring success, the idea of Florentine superiority in the visual arts.

Vasari designed the Tomb of Michelangelo, his hero, in the Basilica of Santa Croce, Florence that was completed in 1578. Based on Vasari's text in print about Giotto's new manner of painting as a rinascita (rebirth), author Jules Michelet in his Histoire de France (1835)[5] suggested the adoption of Vasari's concept, using the term Renaissance (rebirth, in French) to distinguish the cultural change. The term was adopted thereafter in historiography and is still in use today.

Life edit

Vasari was born prematurely on 30 July 1511 in Arezzo, Tuscany.[6] Recommended at an early age by his cousin Luca Signorelli, he became a pupil of Guglielmo da Marsiglia, a skillful painter of stained glass.[7][8] Sent to Florence at the age of sixteen by Cardinal Silvio Passerini, he joined the circle of Andrea del Sarto and his pupils, Rosso Fiorentino and Jacopo Pontormo, where his humanist education was encouraged. He was befriended by Michelangelo, whose painting style would influence his own.

Vasari enjoyed high repute during his lifetime and amassed a considerable fortune. He married Niccolosa Bacci, a member of one of the richest and most prominent families of Arezzo. He was made Knight of the Golden Spur by the Pope. He was elected to the municipal council of his native town and finally, rose to the supreme office of gonfaloniere.[8]

He built a fine house in Arezzo in 1547 and decorated its walls and vaults with paintings. It is now a museum in his honour named the Casa Vasari, whilst his residence in Florence is also preserved.[citation needed]

In 1563, he helped found the Florentine Accademia e Compagnia delle Arti del Disegno, with the Grand Duke and Michelangelo as capi of the institution. Thirty-six artists were chosen as members.[9]

He died on 27 June 1574 in Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany, aged 62.[6]

Painting edit

 
Six Tuscan Poets by Giorgio Vasari, c. 1544; from left to right: Cristoforo Landino, Marsilio Ficino, Francesco Petrarca, Giovanni Boccaccio, Dante Alighieri, and Guido Cavalcanti[10]

In 1529, he visited Rome where he studied the works of Raphael and other artists of the Roman High Renaissance. Vasari's own Mannerist paintings were more admired in his lifetime than afterwards. In 1547, he completed the hall of the chancery in Palazzo della Cancelleria in Rome with frescoes that received the name Sala dei Cento Giorni. He was regulalry employed by members of the Medici family in Florence and Rome. He also worked in Naples (for example on the Vasari Sacristy), Arezzo, and other places. Many of his paintings still exist, the most important being on the wall and ceiling of the Sala di Cosimo I in the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence,[8] where he and his assistants worked from 1555. Vasari also helped to organize the decoration of the Studiolo, now reassembled in the Palazzo Vecchio.

 
The Garden of Gethsemane by Giorgio Vasari

In Rome, he painted frescos in the Sala Regia. Among his better-known pupils or followers are Sebastiano Flori, Bartolomeo Carducci, Mirabello Cavalori (Salincorno), Stefano Veltroni (of Monte San Savino), and Alessandro Fortori (of Arezzo).[11]

His last major commission was a vast The Last Judgement fresco on the ceiling of the cupola of the Florence Cathedral that he began in 1572 with the assistance of the Bolognese painter Lorenzo Sabatini. Unfinished at the time of Vasari's death, it was completed by Federico Zuccari.

Architecture edit

 
The Uffizi Loggia

Aside from his career as a painter, Vasari was successful as an architect.[12] His loggia of the Palazzo degli Uffizi by the Arno opens up the vista at the far end of its long narrow courtyard. It is a unique piece of urban planning that functions as a public piazza, and which, if considered as a short street, is unique as a Renaissance street with a unified architectural treatment[clarification needed]. The view of the Loggia from the Arno reveals that, with the Vasari Corridor, it is one of very few structures lining the river that are open to the river and appear to embrace the riverside environment.[citation needed]

In Florence, Vasari also designed the long passage, now called Vasari Corridor, which connects the Uffizi with the Palazzo Pitti on the other side of the river. The corridor passes alongside the River Arno on an arcade, crosses the Ponte Vecchio, and winds around the exterior of several buildings. It was once the location of the Mercado de Vecchio.[13]

He renovated the medieval churches of Santa Maria Novella and Santa Croce. In both buildings he removed the original rood screen and loft, and remodelled the retro-choirs in the Mannerist taste of his time.[8]

In Santa Croce, he produced the painting of The Adoration of the Magi commissioned by Pope Pius V in 1566 and completed in February 1567. It was restored recently, before being put on exhibition in 2011 in Rome and in Naples. Eventually, it will be returned to the church of Santa Croce in Bosco Marengo (Province of Alessandria, Piedmont).[citation needed]

In 1562, Vasari built the octagonal dome on the Basilica of Our Lady of Humility in Pistoia, an important example of High Renaissance architecture.[14]

In Rome, Vasari worked with Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola and Bartolomeo Ammannati at Pope Julius III's Villa Giulia.

The Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects edit

Often called "the first art historian",[15] Vasari invented the genre of the encyclopedia of artistic biographies with his Le Vite de' più eccellenti pittori, scultori, ed architettori (Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects). This work was first published in 1550 and dedicated to Grand Duke Cosimo I de' Medici. Vasari introduced the term "Rinascita" (rebirth in Italian) in printed works – although an awareness of an ongoing "rebirth" in the arts had been in the air since the time of Alberti. Vasari's term, applied to the change in artistic styles with the work of Giotto, eventually would become the French term Renaissance (rebirth) widely applied to the era that followed. Vasari was responsible for the modern use of the term Gothic art, as well, although he only used the word Goth in association with the German style that preceded the rebirth, which he identified as "barbaric".

The Lives also included a novel treatise on the technical methods employed in the arts.[16][8] The book was partly rewritten and extended in 1568,[8] with the addition of woodcut portraits of artists (some conjectural).[citation needed]

 
Title page of the first and second part of the 1568 edition of the Lives

The work shows a consistent and notorious bias in favour of Florentines and tends to attribute to them all the developments in Renaissance art – for example, the invention of engraving. Venetian art in particular (along with arts from other parts of Europe), is ignored systematically in the first edition. Between his first and second editions, Vasari visited Venice and while the second edition gave more attention to Venetian art (finally including Titian), it did so without achieving a neutral point of view.[citation needed]

Many inaccuracies exist within his Lives. For example, Vasari writes that Andrea del Castagno killed Domenico Veneziano, which is incorrect; Andrea died several years before Domenico. In another example, Vasari's biography of Giovanni Antonio Bazzi, whom he calls "Il Soddoma", published only in the second edition of the Lives (1568) after Bazzi's death, condemns the artist as being immoral, bestial, and vain. Vasari dismisses Bazzi's work as lazy and offensive, despite the artist's having been named a Cavaliere di Cristo by Pope Leo X and having received important commissions for the Villa Farnese and other sites.[17]

Vasari's biographies are interspersed with amusing gossip. Many of his anecdotes seem plausible, while others are assumed fictions, such as the tale of young Giotto painting a fly on the surface of a painting by Cimabue that supposedly, the older master repeatedly tried to brush away (a genre tale that echoes anecdotes told of the Greek painter Apelles). He did carry out research archives for exact dates, as modern art historians do, and his biographies are considered more reliable in the case of his contemporary painters and those of the preceding generation. Modern criticism – with new materials produced by research – has revised many of his dates and facts.[8]

Vasari included a short autobiography at the end of the Lives, and added further details about himself and his family in his lives of Lazzaro Vasari and Francesco Salviati.[8]

According to the historian Richard Goldthwaite,[18] Vasari was one of the earliest authors to use the term "competition" (or "concorrenza" in Italian) in its economic sense. He used it repeatedly, and stressed the concept in his introduction to the life of Pietro Perugino, in explaining the reasons for Florentine artistic preeminence. In Vasari's view, Florentine artists excelled because they were hungry, and they were hungry because their fierce competition amongst themselves for commissions kept them so. Competition, he said, is "one of the nourishments that maintain them".[citation needed]

Gallery edit

References and sources edit

References

  1. ^ "Vasari". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 1 June 2019.
  2. ^ (US) and . Oxford Dictionaries UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 9 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Vasari". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 1 June 2019.
  4. ^ "Vasari". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Retrieved 1 June 2019.
  5. ^ Michelet, Jules (1835). Histoire de France: Renaissance. Vol. VII. Paris.
  6. ^ a b Gaunt, W. (ed.) (1962) Everyman's dictionary of pictorial art. Volume II. London: Dent, p. 328. ISBN 0-460-03006-X
  7. ^ "Art in Tuscany | Giorgio Vasari and Italian Renaissance painting | Podere Santa Pia, Holiday house in the south of Tuscany". www.travelingintuscany.com. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Vasari, Giorgio". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  9. ^ Gauvin Alexander Bailey, 'Santi di Tito and the Florentine Academy: Solomon Building the Temple in the Capitolo of the Accademia del Disegno (1570–71)', Apollo CLV, 480 (February 2002): pp. 31–39.
  10. ^ "Six Tuscan Poets, Giorgio Vasari". Minneapolis Institute of Art.
  11. ^ The History of Painting in Italy: The Florentine, Sienese, and Roman schools, by Luigi Lanzi, page 201-202.
  12. ^ "Vasari's ability as a painter cannot match his talents either as an historian or as an architect," according to Lawrence Gowing, ed., Biographical Encyclopedia of Artists, v.4 (Facts on File, 2005): 695.
  13. ^ Pevsner, N., A History of Building Types, Princeton University Press, 1979, pg. 235
  14. ^ The Christian Travelers Guide to Italy by David Bershad, Carolina Mangone, Irving Hexham 2001 ISBN 0-310-22573-6-page [1]
  15. ^ Vasari, Giorgio 6 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine Dictionary of Art Historians, 2013. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
  16. ^ Vasari, Giorgio. (1907) Vasari on technique: being the introduction to the three arts of design, architecture, sculpture, and painting, prefixed to the Lives of the most excellent painters, sculptors, and architects. G. Baldwin Brown Ed. Louisa S. Maclehose Trans. London: Dent.
  17. ^ Zarucchi, Jeanne Morgan (2015). "Vasari's Biography of Bazzi as 'Soddoma:' Art History and Literary Analysis". Italian Studies. 70 (2): 167–190. doi:10.1179/0075163415Z.00000000094. S2CID 191976882.
  18. ^ Richard Goldthwaite, The Economy of Renaissance Florence, 2009, pg. 390.

Sources

Further reading edit

  • Barriault, Anne B.; Ladis, Andrew T.; Land, Norman E.; Wood, Jeryldene M., eds. (2005). Reading Vasari. London: Philip Wilson.
  • Cast, David J., ed. (2013). The Ashgate Research Companion to Giorgio Vasari. Abingdon-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, England: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781315613017. ISBN 9781409408475.

External links edit

  • Works by Giorgio Vasari at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Giorgio Vasari at Internet Archive
  • Works by Giorgio Vasari at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Works by Giorgio Vasari at Open Library
  • Petri Liukkonen. "Giorgio Vasari". Books and Writers.
  • Giorgio Vasari – The First Art-Historian

Copies of Vasari's Lives of the Artists online:

  • Site created by Adrienne DeAngelis. Now largely completed in the posting of the Lives, intended to be re-translated to become the unabridged English version.
  • Le Vite, 1550 Unabridged, original Italian.
  • Stories Of The Italian Artists From Vasari, translated by E L Seeley, 1908. Abridged, in English.
  • Gli artisti principali citati dal Vasari nelle Vite (elenco)

giorgio, vasari, vasari, redirects, here, italian, surname, vasari, surname, ɑːr, also, ɑːr, ɑː, ɑːr, italian, ˈdʒordʒo, vaˈzaːri, july, 1511, june, 1574, italian, renaissance, painter, architect, best, known, work, lives, most, excellent, painters, sculptors,. Vasari redirects here For the Italian surname see Vasari surname Giorgio Vasari v e ˈ s ɑːr i also US ˈ z ɑːr v ɑː ˈ z ɑːr i 1 2 3 4 Italian ˈdʒordʒo vaˈzaːri 30 July 1511 27 June 1574 was an Italian Renaissance painter and architect who is best known for his work Lives of the Most Excellent Painters Sculptors and Architects considered the ideological foundation of all art historical writing and still much cited in modern biographies of the many Italian Renaissance artists he covers including Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo although he is now regarded as including many factual errors especially when covering artists from before he was born Giorgio VasariSelf portrait c 1571 74 Uffizi GalleryBorn 1511 07 30 30 July 1511Arezzo Republic of FlorenceDied27 June 1574 1574 06 27 aged 62 Florence Grand Duchy of TuscanyEducationAndrea del SartoKnown forPaintingarchitectureart historyNotable workThe Lives of the Most Excellent Painters Sculptors and ArchitectsMovementRenaissanceSpouseNiccolosa BacciGiorgio was a Mannerist painter who was highly regarded both as a painter and architect in his day but rather less so in later centuries He was effectively what would now be called the minister of culture to the Medici court in Florence and the Lives promoted with enduring success the idea of Florentine superiority in the visual arts Vasari designed the Tomb of Michelangelo his hero in the Basilica of Santa Croce Florence that was completed in 1578 Based on Vasari s text in print about Giotto s new manner of painting as a rinascita rebirth author Jules Michelet in his Histoire de France 1835 5 suggested the adoption of Vasari s concept using the term Renaissance rebirth in French to distinguish the cultural change The term was adopted thereafter in historiography and is still in use today Contents 1 Life 2 Painting 3 Architecture 4 The Lives of the Most Excellent Painters Sculptors and Architects 5 Gallery 6 References and sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife editVasari was born prematurely on 30 July 1511 in Arezzo Tuscany 6 Recommended at an early age by his cousin Luca Signorelli he became a pupil of Guglielmo da Marsiglia a skillful painter of stained glass 7 8 Sent to Florence at the age of sixteen by Cardinal Silvio Passerini he joined the circle of Andrea del Sarto and his pupils Rosso Fiorentino and Jacopo Pontormo where his humanist education was encouraged He was befriended by Michelangelo whose painting style would influence his own Vasari enjoyed high repute during his lifetime and amassed a considerable fortune He married Niccolosa Bacci a member of one of the richest and most prominent families of Arezzo He was made Knight of the Golden Spur by the Pope He was elected to the municipal council of his native town and finally rose to the supreme office of gonfaloniere 8 He built a fine house in Arezzo in 1547 and decorated its walls and vaults with paintings It is now a museum in his honour named the Casa Vasari whilst his residence in Florence is also preserved citation needed In 1563 he helped found the Florentine Accademia e Compagnia delle Arti del Disegno with the Grand Duke and Michelangelo as capi of the institution Thirty six artists were chosen as members 9 He died on 27 June 1574 in Florence Grand Duchy of Tuscany aged 62 6 Painting edit nbsp Six Tuscan Poets by Giorgio Vasari c 1544 from left to right Cristoforo Landino Marsilio Ficino Francesco Petrarca Giovanni Boccaccio Dante Alighieri and Guido Cavalcanti 10 In 1529 he visited Rome where he studied the works of Raphael and other artists of the Roman High Renaissance Vasari s own Mannerist paintings were more admired in his lifetime than afterwards In 1547 he completed the hall of the chancery in Palazzo della Cancelleria in Rome with frescoes that received the name Sala dei Cento Giorni He was regulalry employed by members of the Medici family in Florence and Rome He also worked in Naples for example on the Vasari Sacristy Arezzo and other places Many of his paintings still exist the most important being on the wall and ceiling of the Sala di Cosimo I in the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence 8 where he and his assistants worked from 1555 Vasari also helped to organize the decoration of the Studiolo now reassembled in the Palazzo Vecchio nbsp The Garden of Gethsemane by Giorgio VasariIn Rome he painted frescos in the Sala Regia Among his better known pupils or followers are Sebastiano Flori Bartolomeo Carducci Mirabello Cavalori Salincorno Stefano Veltroni of Monte San Savino and Alessandro Fortori of Arezzo 11 His last major commission was a vast The Last Judgement fresco on the ceiling of the cupola of the Florence Cathedral that he began in 1572 with the assistance of the Bolognese painter Lorenzo Sabatini Unfinished at the time of Vasari s death it was completed by Federico Zuccari Architecture edit nbsp The Uffizi LoggiaAside from his career as a painter Vasari was successful as an architect 12 His loggia of the Palazzo degli Uffizi by the Arno opens up the vista at the far end of its long narrow courtyard It is a unique piece of urban planning that functions as a public piazza and which if considered as a short street is unique as a Renaissance street with a unified architectural treatment clarification needed The view of the Loggia from the Arno reveals that with the Vasari Corridor it is one of very few structures lining the river that are open to the river and appear to embrace the riverside environment citation needed In Florence Vasari also designed the long passage now called Vasari Corridor which connects the Uffizi with the Palazzo Pitti on the other side of the river The corridor passes alongside the River Arno on an arcade crosses the Ponte Vecchio and winds around the exterior of several buildings It was once the location of the Mercado de Vecchio 13 He renovated the medieval churches of Santa Maria Novella and Santa Croce In both buildings he removed the original rood screen and loft and remodelled the retro choirs in the Mannerist taste of his time 8 In Santa Croce he produced the painting of The Adoration of the Magi commissioned by Pope Pius V in 1566 and completed in February 1567 It was restored recently before being put on exhibition in 2011 in Rome and in Naples Eventually it will be returned to the church of Santa Croce in Bosco Marengo Province of Alessandria Piedmont citation needed In 1562 Vasari built the octagonal dome on the Basilica of Our Lady of Humility in Pistoia an important example of High Renaissance architecture 14 In Rome Vasari worked with Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola and Bartolomeo Ammannati at Pope Julius III s Villa Giulia The Lives of the Most Excellent Painters Sculptors and Architects editMain article Lives of the Most Excellent Painters Sculptors and Architects Often called the first art historian 15 Vasari invented the genre of the encyclopedia of artistic biographies with his Le Vite de piu eccellenti pittori scultori ed architettori Lives of the Most Excellent Painters Sculptors and Architects This work was first published in 1550 and dedicated to Grand Duke Cosimo I de Medici Vasari introduced the term Rinascita rebirth in Italian in printed works although an awareness of an ongoing rebirth in the arts had been in the air since the time of Alberti Vasari s term applied to the change in artistic styles with the work of Giotto eventually would become the French term Renaissance rebirth widely applied to the era that followed Vasari was responsible for the modern use of the term Gothic art as well although he only used the word Goth in association with the German style that preceded the rebirth which he identified as barbaric The Lives also included a novel treatise on the technical methods employed in the arts 16 8 The book was partly rewritten and extended in 1568 8 with the addition of woodcut portraits of artists some conjectural citation needed nbsp Title page of the first and second part of the 1568 edition of the LivesThe work shows a consistent and notorious bias in favour of Florentines and tends to attribute to them all the developments in Renaissance art for example the invention of engraving Venetian art in particular along with arts from other parts of Europe is ignored systematically in the first edition Between his first and second editions Vasari visited Venice and while the second edition gave more attention to Venetian art finally including Titian it did so without achieving a neutral point of view citation needed Many inaccuracies exist within his Lives For example Vasari writes that Andrea del Castagno killed Domenico Veneziano which is incorrect Andrea died several years before Domenico In another example Vasari s biography of Giovanni Antonio Bazzi whom he calls Il Soddoma published only in the second edition of the Lives 1568 after Bazzi s death condemns the artist as being immoral bestial and vain Vasari dismisses Bazzi s work as lazy and offensive despite the artist s having been named a Cavaliere di Cristo by Pope Leo X and having received important commissions for the Villa Farnese and other sites 17 Vasari s biographies are interspersed with amusing gossip Many of his anecdotes seem plausible while others are assumed fictions such as the tale of young Giotto painting a fly on the surface of a painting by Cimabue that supposedly the older master repeatedly tried to brush away a genre tale that echoes anecdotes told of the Greek painter Apelles He did carry out research archives for exact dates as modern art historians do and his biographies are considered more reliable in the case of his contemporary painters and those of the preceding generation Modern criticism with new materials produced by research has revised many of his dates and facts 8 Vasari included a short autobiography at the end of the Lives and added further details about himself and his family in his lives of Lazzaro Vasari and Francesco Salviati 8 According to the historian Richard Goldthwaite 18 Vasari was one of the earliest authors to use the term competition or concorrenza in Italian in its economic sense He used it repeatedly and stressed the concept in his introduction to the life of Pietro Perugino in explaining the reasons for Florentine artistic preeminence In Vasari s view Florentine artists excelled because they were hungry and they were hungry because their fierce competition amongst themselves for commissions kept them so Competition he said is one of the nourishments that maintain them citation needed Gallery editPaintings by Giorgio Vasari nbsp Alessandro de Medici resting nbsp Pieta nbsp Bird catchers nbsp Holy Family with Andrea del Sarto nbsp Last Supper nbsp Entombment nbsp Temptations of St Jerome nbsp St Luke painting the Virgin nbsp Annunciation nbsp Justice nbsp The Prophet ElishaFrescos and decorations by Giorgio Vasari nbsp Interior of the dome of Florence Cathedral nbsp Cosimo studies the taking of Siena nbsp Apotheosis ofCosimo I nbsp Defeat of the Venetians in CasentinoLibro de Disegni by Giorgio Vasari nbsp Giorgio Vasari with drawings by Filippino Lippi Botticelli and Raffaellino del Garbo nbsp Giorgio Vasari with drawings by Filippino Lippi Botticelli and Raffaellino del GarboArchitecture by Giorgio Vasari nbsp Uffizi colonnade and loggia nbsp Loggia of Vasari in Arezzo nbsp San Pietro in Montorio Rome nbsp Tomb of Michelangelo nbsp Sala dei Cento Giorni Giorgio Vasari 1547 Palazzo della Cancelleria nbsp Villa Giulia Court Vasari Vignola nbsp Part of the Loggia del Mercato Vecchio Florence just prior to its demolition in the 1880sReferences and sources editReferences Vasari Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 1 June 2019 Vasari Giorgio US and Vasari Giorgio Oxford Dictionaries UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 9 November 2021 Vasari The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved 1 June 2019 Vasari Merriam Webster com Dictionary Retrieved 1 June 2019 Michelet Jules 1835 Histoire de France Renaissance Vol VII Paris a b Gaunt W ed 1962 Everyman s dictionary of pictorial art Volume II London Dent p 328 ISBN 0 460 03006 X Art in Tuscany Giorgio Vasari and Italian Renaissance painting Podere Santa Pia Holiday house in the south of Tuscany www travelingintuscany com Retrieved 1 October 2017 a b c d e f g h nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Vasari Giorgio Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed Cambridge University Press Gauvin Alexander Bailey Santi di Tito and the Florentine Academy Solomon Building the Temple in the Capitolo of the Accademia del Disegno 1570 71 Apollo CLV 480 February 2002 pp 31 39 Six Tuscan Poets Giorgio Vasari Minneapolis Institute of Art The History of Painting in Italy The Florentine Sienese and Roman schools by Luigi Lanzi page 201 202 Vasari s ability as a painter cannot match his talents either as an historian or as an architect according to Lawrence Gowing ed Biographical Encyclopedia of Artists v 4 Facts on File 2005 695 Pevsner N A History of Building Types Princeton University Press 1979 pg 235 The Christian Travelers Guide to Italy by David Bershad Carolina Mangone Irving Hexham 2001 ISBN 0 310 22573 6 page 1 Vasari Giorgio Archived 6 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine Dictionary of Art Historians 2013 Retrieved 26 May 2013 Vasari Giorgio 1907 Vasari on technique being the introduction to the three arts of design architecture sculpture and painting prefixed to the Lives of the most excellent painters sculptors and architects G Baldwin Brown Ed Louisa S Maclehose Trans London Dent Zarucchi Jeanne Morgan 2015 Vasari s Biography of Bazzi as Soddoma Art History and Literary Analysis Italian Studies 70 2 167 190 doi 10 1179 0075163415Z 00000000094 S2CID 191976882 Richard Goldthwaite The Economy of Renaissance Florence 2009 pg 390 Sources The Lives of the Artists Oxford University Press 1998 ISBN 0 19 283410 X Lives of the Painters Sculptors and Architects Volumes I and II Everyman s Library 1996 ISBN 0 679 45101 3 Vasari on Technique Dover Publications 1980 ISBN 0 486 20717 X Life of Michelangelo Alba House 2003 ISBN 0 8189 0935 8 Herbermann Charles ed 1912 Giorgio Vasari Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 15 New York Robert Appleton Company Further reading editBarriault Anne B Ladis Andrew T Land Norman E Wood Jeryldene M eds 2005 Reading Vasari London Philip Wilson Cast David J ed 2013 The Ashgate Research Companion to Giorgio Vasari Abingdon on Thames Oxfordshire England Routledge doi 10 4324 9781315613017 ISBN 9781409408475 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Giorgio Vasari nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Giorgio Vasari Works by Giorgio Vasari at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Giorgio Vasari at Internet Archive Works by Giorgio Vasari at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Works by Giorgio Vasari at Open Library Biography of Vasari and analysis for four major works Petri Liukkonen Giorgio Vasari Books and Writers Giorgio Vasari The First Art HistorianCopies of Vasari s Lives of the Artists online Giorgio Vasari s Lives of the Artists Site created by Adrienne DeAngelis Now largely completed in the posting of the Lives intended to be re translated to become the unabridged English version Le Vite 1550 Unabridged original Italian Stories Of The Italian Artists From Vasari translated by E L Seeley 1908 Abridged in English Le Vite Edizioni Giuntina e Torrentiniana Gli artisti principali citati dal Vasari nelle Vite elenco Excerpts from the Vite combined with photos of works mentioned by Vasari Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Giorgio Vasari amp oldid 1207526963, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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