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Book Cover
Book
Author Hulse, Clark, 1947-

Title The rule of art : literature and painting in the Renaissance / Clark Hulse
Published Chicago : University of Chicago Press, [1990]
©1990

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 WATERFT ART&ARCH  700.9024 Hul/Roa  AVAILABLE
Description xv, 215 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Contents Machine derived contents note: List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Toward a New Theory of the Arts -- 2. The Rule of the Word -- 3. Alberti and History -- 4. The Circle of Raphael -- 5. Sidney and Hilliard -- 6. Between Theory and Practice -- Notes -- Index
Summary What do Renaissance poetry and painting have in common? What are the social, ideological, and aesthetic bases for the links between them? And what role do those links play in creating the humanistic culture that still has power over us today? These are the questions Clark Hulse takes up in this sophisticated interdisciplinary study of Renaissance aesthetics. Proposing an archeology of artistic knowledge, Hulse examines the theoretical language through which the poets, painters, and patrons of the Renaissance conceived of the relationship between the arts. That language is embedded in what he calls a "rule of art," a specific set of categories, assumptions, and practices that defined the two art forms and the relationship between them. Hulse charts the rise of both forms to the status of liberal arts requiring special intellectual training for artist and patron alike. In the process, he uncovers the history of the practice of theory in the Renaissance, revealing how artistic discourse lived in the world. -- Publisher's website
Analysis Arts, Renaissance
Notes Includes index
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 181-207) and index
Subject Arts, Renaissance.
LC no. 89039546
ISBN 0226360520 (alk. paper)