Medieval Bologna : art for a university city /

"Accompanying an exhibition at the Frist Art Museum, this catalogue is the first major study in English about manuscript illumination, painting, and sculpture in the northern Italian city of Bologna between the years 1200 and 1400. Bologna's university is the oldest in Europe. Its origins...

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Authors: Frist Art Museum (Nashville, Tenn.)
Group Author: Kennedy, Trinita (Editor)
Published: Frist Art Museum ; Paul Holberton Publishing,
Publisher Address: Nashville, TN : London :
Publication Dates: [2021]
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Subjects:
Summary: "Accompanying an exhibition at the Frist Art Museum, this catalogue is the first major study in English about manuscript illumination, painting, and sculpture in the northern Italian city of Bologna between the years 1200 and 1400. Bologna's university is the oldest in Europe. Its origins have been traced to the late eleventh century, when scholars started gathering in the city to study Roman law and attracted students. The academic setting gave rise to Bologna's unique artistic culture. Professors enjoyed high social status and were buried in impressive tombs carved with classroom scenes. Most importantly, teachers and students created a tremendous demand for books. In the thirteenth century, Bologna emerged as the preeminent center for manuscript production in Italy. Most books were made there outside of traditional monastic scriptoria, within a revolutionary commercial system involving stationers, parchment makers, scribes, illuminators, and clients. A new style of script, called the littera bononiensis, distinguished Bolognese books, and the city's illuminators were celebrated as artists in Dante's Divine Comedy. The legal textbooks produced in great numbers in the city are remarkable for their heft and size. In addition to illuminations, which include colorful narrative scenes, these manuscripts often contain the notes, corrections, and doodles of their original owners. The seven essays in this publication-by academics, a conservator, curators, and a museum educator-create a rich context for the works of art in the exhibition, which are drawn primarily from American libraries, museums, and private collections. The authors explore medieval Bologna-its porticoed streets, piazzas, communal buildings, mendicant churches, and towers-and how the city became a center for higher learning at the end of the Middle Ages. They describe the way books were made there, including identifying the pigments used by illuminators. The authors also discuss the illustrious foreign artists called to work in the city, most notably Cimabue and Giotto; the devastating impact of the bubonic plague; and the political resurgence of Bologna at the end of the fourteenth century that led to the construction of the Basilica of San Petronio, one of the largest churches in the world, to honor the city's patron saint. By focusing on Bologna, Europe's first university city, this publication aims to expand our understanding of art and its purposes in the medieval world"--
Item Description: Features an illuminated manuscript from the University of Chicago Library's collections: Justinian I's Novellae constitutiones, MS423.
Carrier Form: xiii, 208 pages, 84 pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color), color map ; 29 cm
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references (pages 190-204) and index.
ISBN: 9781911300816
1911300814
Index Number: ND3161
CLC: J154.609.3-28
Call Number: J154.609.3-28/M489
Contents: Medieval Bologna through its books /
Bologna: the built environment /
Bringing honor to that art called illumination: Bolognese manuscript painting techniques, ca. 1250-1400 /
Learning the law in Medieval Bologna : the production and use of illuminated legal manuscripts /
The art of the friars in the university city /
Pride and glory in the art of illumination : manuscripts for church ceremonies from Bologna and environs /
Bolognese narrative painting around the time of papal legate Bertrand du Pouget (1327-1334) /