, Brepols - Harvey Miller, 2023 Hardback, 272 pages, Size:220 x 280 mm, Illustrations:10 b/w, 220 col., Language: English. ISBN 9781915487025.
Summary Through a careful description of its architecture, paintings and sculptures, this book offers the first comprehensive analysis of the Villa Barbaro at Maser, one of the most famous masterpieces of the Italian Renaissance. Commissioned and designed by Daniele Barbaro, a leading humanist of the Venetian Renaissance, and his brother Marc'Antonio, an important politician of the Republic of Venice and a talented amateur artist, the villa's architecture and painted decoration were created by two canonical figures of Renaissance art: the architect Andrea Palladio and the painter Paolo Veronese. By offering a new and holistic reading of the iconographic program of Villa Barbaro, the study highlights in particular the importance of women, childbirth and motherhood. With a strong multidisciplinary approach, the book is also a contribution to the history of astronomy, philosophy and domesticity in sixteenth-century Venice. TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION The family and their artists: A portrait gallery Setting up the investigation: Historiography and method Notes Part One THE WOMAN IN WHITE I The sundials II Daniele Barbaro the astronomer III The cosmos in a villa: The Hall of Olympus IV The identity of the woman in white V When the Sun meets the Moon: A dragon story VI Eclipses, the writing of history, and the reform of the calendar VII The Room of Virtues: Daniele Barbaro between reason and faith VIII The Room of Fortune and Venetian geopolitics Notes Part Two DELOS IN TERRAFERMA I The entrance to the villa: Time, the sea, and a marriage II The double-headed eagle: Francesco Barbaro, Venice, and the East III Welcome to the villa: The concept of hospitality and Villa Barbaro as a theater stage IV The Hymenaeus Room: Untying the girdle V The Bacchus Room: The civilizing process VI Keeping the fire alive: The chimneypieces in the Hymenaeus and Bacchus rooms VII The Cruciform Hall, Part 1: Childbirth VIII The Cruciform Hall, Part 2: Crusade IX The nymphaeum: An image of fertility X The grotto: Socrates, Daniele Barbaro, and the immortality of the soul XI The ten statues of the hemicycle XII Civil happiness Notes Conclusion Notes Epilogue MARINA VOLPI, TOMASO BUZZI, AND THE "RESTORATION" OF THE 1930s Notes List of Illustrations Bibliography Index