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Practice and Theory in the Italian Renaissance Workshop
Verrocchio and the Epistemology of Making Art
Verrocchio worked in an extraordinarily wide array of media and used unusual practices of making to express ideas.
Christina Neilson (Author)
9781107172852, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 18 July 2019
362 pages, 146 b/w illus.
26.1 x 18.5 x 2.2 cm, 0.96 kg
Verrocchio was arguably the most important sculptor between Donatello and Michelangelo but he has seldom been treated as such in art historical literature because his achievements were quickly superseded by the artists who followed him. He was the master of Leonardo da Vinci, but he is remembered as the sulky teacher that his star pupil did not need. In this book, Christina Neilson argues that Verrocchio was one of the most experimental artists in fifteenth-century Florence, itself one of the most innovative centers of artistic production in Europe. Considering the different media in which the artist worked in dialogue with one another (sculpture, painting, and drawing), she offers an analysis of Verrocchio's unusual methods of manufacture. Neilson shows that, for Verrocchio, making was a form of knowledge and that techniques of making can be read as systems of knowledge. By studying Verrocchio's technical processes, she demonstrates how an artist's theoretical commitments can be uncovered, even in the absence of a written treatise.
Introduction
1. Verrocchio's ingenuity
2. Verrocchio's Medici Tomb: art as treatise
3. Bridging dimensions: Verrocchio's Christ and Saint Thomas as absent presence
4. The sculptured imagination
5. Material meditations in Verrocchio's Bargello Crucifix
Conclusion
A note on archival sources
Bibliography
Index.
Subject Areas: Renaissance art [ACND], History of art / art & design styles [AC]