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Paperback Gombrich on the Renaissance Volume III: The Heritage of Apelles Book

ISBN: 0714820113

ISBN13: 9780714820118

Gombrich on the Renaissance Volume III: The Heritage of Apelles

(Book #3 in the Studies in the Art of the Renaissance Series)

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Book Overview

The third volume of E H Gombrich's seminal essays on the Renaissance has the classical tradition as its central theme. Apelles, the most famous painter of ancient Greece, was said to have combined perfect beauty with supreme skill in imitating the appearances of nature. These twin ideals of perfect beauty and perfect imitation of nature, which were inherited from classical antiquity and remained unchallenged as the cornerstone of art until the...

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A masterpiece by one of 20th-century art history's Old Masters

this book (in my opinion) shows Gombrich's best qualities as historian AND art critic. In his earlier publications, Gombrich famously established that "realist" representation was as much dependent on the transmission of schematic and/or conventional patterns as those arts identified as "decorative" or "abstract." In "The Heritage . . ." he maps the history of the representational conventions at work in the most magically compelling of early Renaissance "realisms"--the rendering of light (direct, reflected and refracted) in Flemish painting. By focusing historical attention on light effects, rather than on linear perspective (initially, a Florentine invention), Gombrich has made it possible to rethink the whole of Renaissance painting's cultural significance, as a creative application of the ancient and medieval science of optics--the systematic study of light and visual perception. The textbook characterization of Renaissance art still privileges the "mathematical" rigors of perspective-rendering over the "intuitive" mimicry of light (and its corollary, color), but Gombrich brilliantly demonstrates that they are the two sides of a single coin, each concerned with translating into pictorial formulas the mechanisms of light's transmission and light's reception by the eye.
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