In 2011 on the occasion of the five hundreth anniversary of his birth, Vasari was heavily discussed with an approach much less bound and conditioned by the ideas of the critics in the past. There were so many celebrations organized in his honor that we can call it a pure and true consecration. Almost as it were a myth, and a myth is not born by itself. Much of this success should primarily be attributed to the artist himself. Vasari was an incomparable artisan of his own image, in passing it on to posterity; supported in this effort by his acquaintances he chose accurately and later, because of the work and contributions of his heirs, which are still unappreciated to this day.1 In light of these observations, the scope of this essay is to highlight the fact that Vasari might not have entrusted the task of the artists’ posthumous fame, and the claim of their new social status obtained in the sixteenth century, only to his le Vite, but also how, through his entire artistic career and under different forms of communication, he was deeply committed and dedicated to achieving these goals. Indeed, this essay is about investigating Vasari’s self-portrayal: how he describes himself in relation to his own art, thus proposing an interpretation more cross-sectional of the style in which Vasari builds his own image through the years; observing more attentively his portraits, self-portraits, and some of his works painted in residences in Arezzo and Florence; and finally, by considering the important work the Ragionamenti.
Vasari Between the Paragone and the Portraits of Himself
PASSIGNAT, Émilie
2013-01-01
Abstract
In 2011 on the occasion of the five hundreth anniversary of his birth, Vasari was heavily discussed with an approach much less bound and conditioned by the ideas of the critics in the past. There were so many celebrations organized in his honor that we can call it a pure and true consecration. Almost as it were a myth, and a myth is not born by itself. Much of this success should primarily be attributed to the artist himself. Vasari was an incomparable artisan of his own image, in passing it on to posterity; supported in this effort by his acquaintances he chose accurately and later, because of the work and contributions of his heirs, which are still unappreciated to this day.1 In light of these observations, the scope of this essay is to highlight the fact that Vasari might not have entrusted the task of the artists’ posthumous fame, and the claim of their new social status obtained in the sixteenth century, only to his le Vite, but also how, through his entire artistic career and under different forms of communication, he was deeply committed and dedicated to achieving these goals. Indeed, this essay is about investigating Vasari’s self-portrayal: how he describes himself in relation to his own art, thus proposing an interpretation more cross-sectional of the style in which Vasari builds his own image through the years; observing more attentively his portraits, self-portraits, and some of his works painted in residences in Arezzo and Florence; and finally, by considering the important work the Ragionamenti.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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