Academic literature on the topic 'Palazzo Sassetti (Florence, Italy)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Palazzo Sassetti (Florence, Italy)"

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Pierelli, Luca, and Hans Vrielink. "Welcome to the 2nd International Joint Meeting ESFH-SIdEM May 19–22, Palazzo dei Congressi, Florence, Italy." Transfusion and Apheresis Science 49, no. 3 (December 2013): 374–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.transci.2013.09.010.

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Chiari, M., F. Lucarelli, A. Migliori, S. Nava, G. Valli, R. Vecchi, I. Garcia-Orellana, and F. Mazzei. "PIXE analysis of PM10–2.5 and PM2.5 with hourly resolution from Michelozzo’s Courtyard in Palazzo Vecchio (Florence, Italy)." Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms 249, no. 1-2 (August 2006): 552–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nimb.2006.03.051.

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Imposa, Sebastiano. "Infrared thermography and Georadar techniques applied to the “Sala delle Nicchie” (Niches Hall) of Palazzo Pitti, Florence (Italy)." Journal of Cultural Heritage 11, no. 3 (July 2010): 259–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.culher.2009.04.005.

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Ione, Amy. "A Mysterious Masterpiece: The World of the Linder Gallery edited by Michael John Gorman. Florence, Italy: Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi/Alias. 135 pp., illus. Paper. ISBN: 978-8-96532-02-7." Leonardo 44, no. 2 (April 2011): 182–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/leon_r_00135.

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Mazurczak, Urszula. "Panorama Konstantynopola w Liber chronicarum Hartmanna Schedla (1493). Miasto idealne – memoria chrześcijaństwa." Vox Patrum 70 (December 12, 2018): 499–525. http://dx.doi.org/10.31743/vp.3219.

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The historical research of the illustrated Nuremberg Chronicle [Schedelsche Weltchronik (English: Schedel’s World Chronicle)] of Hartmann Schedel com­prises the complex historical knowledge about numerous woodcuts which pre­sent views of various cities important in the world’s history, e.g. Jerusalem, Constantinople, or the European ones such as: Rome, some Italian, German or Polish cities e.g. Wrocław and Cracow; some Hungarian and some Czech Republic cities. Researchers have made a serious study to recognize certain constructions in the woodcuts; they indicated the conservative and contractual architecture, the existing places and the unrealistic (non-existent) places. The results show that there is a common detail in all the views – the defensive wall round each of the described cities. However, in reality, it may not have existed in some cities during the lifetime of the authors of the woodcuts. As for some further details: behind the walls we can see feudal castles on the hills shown as strongholds. Within the defensive walls there are numerous buildings with many towers typical for the Middle Ages and true-to-life in certain ways of building the cities. Schematically drawn buildings surrounded by the ring of defensive walls indicate that the author used certain patterns based on the previously created panoramic views. This article is an attempt of making analogical comparisons of the cities in medieval painting. The Author of the article presents Roman mosaics and the miniature painting e.g. the ones created in the scriptorium in Reichenau. Since the beginning of 14th century Italian painters such as: Duccio di Buoninsegna, Giotto di Bondone, Simone Martini and Ambrogio Lorenzetti painted parts of the cities or the entire monumental panoramas in various compositions and with various meanings. One defining rule in this painting concerned the definitions of the cities given by Saint Isidore of Seville, based on the rules which he knew from the antique tradition. These are: urbs – the cities full of architecture and buildings but uninhabited or civita – the city, the living space of the human life, build-up space, engaged according to the law, kind of work and social hierarchy. The tra­dition of both ways of describing the city is rooted in Italy. This article indicates the particular meaning of Italian painting in distributing the image of the city – as the votive offering. The research conducted by Chiara Frugoni and others indica­ted the meaning of the city images in the painting of various forms of panegyrics created in high praise of cities, known as laude (Lat.). We can find the examples of them rooted in the Roman tradition of mosaics, e.g. in San Apollinare Nuovo in Ravenna. They present both palatium and civitas. The medieval Italian painting, especially the panel painting, presents the city structure models which are uninha­bited and deprived of any signs of everyday life. The models of cities – urbs, are presented as votive offerings devoted to their patron saints, especially to Virgin Mary. The city shaped as oval or sinusoidal rings surrounded by the defensive walls resembled a container filled with buildings. Only few of them reflected the existing cities and could mainly be identified thanks to the inscriptions. The most characteristic examples were: the fresco of Taddeo di Bartolo in Palazzo Publico in Siena, which presented the Dominican Order friar Ambrogio Sansedoni holding the model of his city – Siena, with its most recognizable building - the Cathedral dedicated to the Assumption of Mary. The same painter, referred to as the master painter of the views of the cities as the votive offerings, painted the Saint Antilla with the model of Montepulciano in the painting from 1401 for the Cathedral devoted to the Assumption of Mary in Montepulciano. In the painting made by T. di Bartolo, the bishop of the city of Gimignano, Saint Gimignano, presents the city in the shape of a round lens surrounded by defence walls with numerous church towers and the feudal headquarters characteristic for the city. His dummer of the city is pyramidally-structured, the hills are mounted on the steep slopes reflecting the analogy to the topography of the city. We can also find the texts of songs, laude (Lat.) and panegyrics created in honour of the cities and their rulers, e.g. the texts in honour of Milan, Bonvesin for La Riva, known in Europe at that time. The city – Arcadia (utopia) in the modern style. Hartman Schedel, as a bibliophile and a scholar, knew the texts of medieval writers and Italian art but, as an ambitious humanist, he could not disregard the latest, contemporary trends of Renaissance which were coming from Nuremberg and from Italian ci­ties. The views of Arcadia – the utopian city, were rapidly developing, as they were of great importance for the rich recipient in the beginning of the modern era overwhelmed by the early capitalism. It was then when the two opposites were combined – the shepherd and the knight, the Greek Arcadia with the medie­val city. The reception of Virgil’s Arcadia in the medieval literature and art was being developed again in the elite circles at the end of 15th century. The cultural meaning of the historical loci, the Greek places of the ancient history and the memory of Christianity constituted the essence of historicism in the Renaissance at the courts of the Comnenos and of the Palaiologos dynasty, which inspired the Renaissance of the Latin culture circle. The pastoral idleness concept came from Venice where Virgil’s books were published in print in 1470, the books of Ovid: Fasti and Metamorphoses were published in 1497 and Sannazaro’s Arcadia was published in 1502, previously distributed in his handwriting since 1480. Literature topics presented the historical works as memoria, both ancient and Christian, composed into the images. The city maps drawn by Hartmann Schedel, the doctor and humanist from Nurnberg, refer to the medieval images of urbs, the woodcuts with the cities, known to the author from the Italian painting of the greatest masters of the Trecenta period. As a humanist he knew the literature of the Renaissance of Florence and Venice with the Arcadian themes of both the Greek and the Roman tradition. The view of Constantinople in the context of the contemporary political situation, is presented in a series of monuments of architecture, with columns and defensive walls, which reminded of the history of the city from its greatest time of Constantine the Great, Justinian I and the Comnenus dynasty. Schedel’s work of art is the sum of the knowledge written down or painted. It is also the result of the experiments of new technology. It is possible that Schedel was inspired by the hymns, laude, written by Psellos in honour of Constantinople in his elaborate ecphrases as the panegyrics for the rulers of the Greek dynasty – the Macedonians. Already in that time, the Greek ideal of beauty was reborn, both in literature and in fine arts. The illustrated History of the World presented in Schedel’s woodcuts is given to the recipients who are educated and to those who are anonymous, in the spirit of the new anthropology. It results from the nature of the woodcut reproduc­tion, that is from the way of copying the same images. The artist must have strived to gain the recipients for his works as the woodcuts were created both in Latin and in German. The collected views were supposed to transfer historical, biblical and mythological knowledge in the new way of communication.
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Ridgway, F. R. Serra. "Art and Religion in Ancient Italy - Fede Berti, Carlo Gasparri (edd.): Dionysos. Mito e mistero. (Exhibition catalogue: Comacchio, Palazzo Bellini 7 maggio - 17 dicembre 1989.) Pp. 197; colour and black and white plates. Bologna: Nuova Alfa Editoriale, 1989. - Fede Berti (ed.): Dionysos. Mito e mistero: Atti del Convegno internazionale, Comacchio 3–5 novembre 1989. Pp. 444; drawings and black and white figures. Comacchio: Comune di Comacchio, 1991. - Antonella Romualdi (ed.): Populonia in età ellenistica. I materiali dalle necropoli: Atti del Seminario, Firenze 30 giugno 1986. Pp. 222; drawings and black and white figures. Florence: Soprintendenza archeologica per la Toscana, 1992. - Angelo Bottini: Archeologia della salvezza: L'escatologia greca nelle testimonianze archeologiche. (Biblioteca di archeologia, 17.) Pp. 191; maps, drawings and black and white plates. Milan: Longanesi, 1992. L. 32,000." Classical Review 43, no. 2 (October 1993): 389–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0009840x0028791x.

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"The 4th International Congress of Andrology Palazzo dei Congressi and Centro Affari Florence, Italy." Endocrinology 123, no. 4 (October 1988): 1948. http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/endo-123-4-1948.

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Dominici, Stefano, and Gary D. Rosenberg. "Introduction: Nicolaus Steno and earth science in early modern Italy." Substantia, June 18, 2021, 5–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/substantia-1273.

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A group of scientists interested in history of science and fascinated by the figure of Nicolaus Steno (1638-1686) gathered in Florence for the 350th anniversary of the publication of his De solido intra solidum naturaliter contento prodromus dissertationis. A public conference held at Palazzo Fenzi on 16 October 2019 and a geological fieldtrip on the following day were occasions to discuss different points of view on the last published work of the Danish natural philosopher, dedicated to "solids naturally enclosed in other solids" (De solido intra solidum naturaliter contento, or De solido in short). The title of the gathering, "Galilean foundation for a solid earth", emphasized the philosophical context that Steno found in Florence, where in 1666-1668 he established tight human and philosophical bonds with renowned Italian disciples of Galileo Galilei and members of the Accademia del Cimento. For participants to the 2019 gathering, the Museum of Natural History of the University of Florence, hosting some of Steno's geological specimens, and the region of Tuscany itself, formed the perfect location to discuss the phenomena that Steno had observed from 1666-1668, the motivations for his research, the methodology of his discovery and, generally stated, the European scientific context which informed his inquiry. Some of the talks given in that meeting are included within this volume, kindly hosted by Substantia, International Journal of the History of Chemistry published by the Florence University Press. In addition some of the invited speakers who were unable to attend, also contributed a paper to this publication. The collection is about earth science in the early modern period, when the study of minerals, rocks, and the fossilized remains of living things did not yet form a distinct path to knowledge about earth history, but was an integral part of the wider "philosophy of nature".
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Pieraccini, Massimiliano, Lapo Miccinesi, Alessandro Conti, Lidia Fiorini, Grazia Tucci, Ilaria Pieri, and Stefano Corazzini. "Integration of GPR and TLS for investigating the floor of the ‘Salone dei Cinquecento’ in Palazzo Vecchio, Florence, Italy." Archaeological Prospection, June 26, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/arp.1788.

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"Abstracts from the 36th Annual Congress of the Italian Urodynamic Society (Continence, Neuro-Urology, Pelvic Floor) Palazzo dei Congressi, Florence, Italy 24-26 May 2012." Neurourology and Urodynamics 31, S1 (June 2012): S1—S50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/nau.22259.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Palazzo Sassetti (Florence, Italy)"

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Lillie, Amanda Rhoda. "Florentine villas in the fifteenth century : a study of the Strozzi and Sassetti country properties." Thesis, Courtauld Institute of Art (University of London), 1986. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.262223.

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Bailie, Lindsey Leigh. "Staging Privacy: Art and Architecture of the Palazzo Medici." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/11049.

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xii, 112 p. : ill. (some col.) A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries. Search the library catalog for the location and call number.
The Palazzo Medici was a site of significant social and political representation for the Medici. Access to much of the interior was limited, ostensibly, to the family. In republican Florence, however, visitors were a crucial component in the maintenance of a political faction. Consequently, the "private" spaces of the Palazzo Medici were designed and decorated with guests in mind. Visitor accounts reveal that the path and destination of each visitor differed according to his status and significance to the family. The common citizen waited, sometimes for great lengths, in the courtyard, taking in the anti-tyrannical message of the space. The privileged guest, who had more to provide the Medici, was given access to the more private spaces of the residence. Surrounded by art and architecture that demonstrated the faith, education, and wealth of the Medici, he was assured that his support of the family was beneficial to his own pursuits.
Committee in charge: James Harper, Chairperson; Jim Tice, Member; Jeff Hurwit, Member
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Maratsos, Jessica. "The Devotional Imagination of Jacopo Pontormo." Thesis, 2014. https://doi.org/10.7916/D8CN722C.

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In Italy the first half of the Cinquecento was marked by both flourishing artistic innovation and deep-seated religious uncertainty, the latter revealing itself most clearly in a widespread impetus towards reform. The relationship between these two cultural spheres--long a fraught problem in art historical scholarship--is made visually manifest in the religious works produced by the Florentine painter Jacopo da Pontormo. By re-examining Pontormo's three monumental religious commissions--the Certosa del Galluzzo (1522-27), the Capponi Chapel (1525-28), and the choir of San Lorenzo (1545-1557)--this dissertation maps the complex dialogue between artistic and devotional practice that characterized this era. Further, in highlighting the active role of the painter in this dynamic I propose a not only a new understanding of Pontormo, but also enrich our current notions of artistic agency in the Renaissance period. The foundation of these arguments derives from a re-evaluation of the specific historical context on the one hand, and the implementation of a broader framework of visual culture on the other. Taking its cue from Giorgio Vasari's 1568 edition of The Lives of the Artists, modern scholarship has tended to view much of the art from the early sixteenth century through a post-Tridentine lens; paintings are labeled controversial or heretical, when in fact such notions would not have been relevant in these earlier decades. Published five years after the conclusion of the Council of Trent, Vasari's Lives is predominantly characterized by the author's own attempts to codify artistic pedagogy and style in the service of the Medici Duchy, whose newly consolidated ties with the papacy were of primary importance. A further difficulty presented by following Vasari's example is the relatively narrow view of the artistic environment that his account affords. Aimed as it was towards the social elevation of the individual Renaissance artist, Vasari's narrative undervalues the importance of other genres and media--such as prints, Mystery plays, terracotta sculptures, and sacri monti--to the work of well-established painters like Pontormo. Each chapter examines a single, monumental project, delineating the artist's responsiveness to, and engagement with, the unique devotional and artistic challenges inherent to the individual commission. Chapter One resituates Pontormo's use of the maniera tedesca within the broader contexts of northern devotional practices and the parallels they form with affective strategies employed by other genres including sacre rappresentazioni and sacri monti. Chapter Two focuses on the painter's decision to portray himself the guise of Nicodemus, and the ways in which this identification evoked an entire web of historical associations--linked to hagiographic tradition and local legend--that would have been accessible to contemporary viewers. Finally, in Chapter Three I investigate Pontormo's pictorial approach, which combined an overarching diagrammatic simplicity with a complex, allusive figural language, as a means of communicating to the different levels of Florentine society that would have been his audience in this important parish church.
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Books on the topic "Palazzo Sassetti (Florence, Italy)"

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Cardini, Giulio Cesare Lensi Orlandi. Il palazzo dei Sassetti: Banchieri fiorentini. Firenze: Vallecchi, 1990.

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Cecchi, Alessandro. Palazzo Vecchio. Boston: Sandak, 1992.

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Cecchi, Alessandro. Palazzo Vecchio, Firenze. Roma: Istituto poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato, Libreria dello Stato, 1995.

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Floridia, Anna. Palazzo Panciatichi in Firenze. Roma: Istituto della enciclopedia italiana, 1993.

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Civai, Alessandra. Palazzo Capponi Covoni in Firenze. [Florence, Italy]: Consiglio regionale della Toscana, 1993.

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Mario, Pagni, ed. Il palazzo e il tempio: Palazzo Altoviti a Firenze : storia e simbologie. Siena (Italia): Betti editrice, 2012.

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Painting, sculpture and architecture in Palazzo Vecchio of Florence. Firenze: Le lettere, 1997.

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Marilena, Mosco, and Museo delle porcellane (Florence, Italy), eds. Le porcellane di Vienna a Palazzo Pitti =: The Viennese porcelain at Palazzo Pitti. Firenze: Centro Di, 2002.

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La Cappella Sassetti nella Chiesa di Santa Trinita. Lucca: Maria Pacini Fazzi, 1996.

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Casazza, Ornella. Gioiello contemporaneo: Al Museo degli argenti di Palazzo Pitti. Livorno: Sillabe, 2007.

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Conference papers on the topic "Palazzo Sassetti (Florence, Italy)"

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Falvo, Perla Gianni. "In the mirror of the wonder of Luca Giordano: Multisensory experience itinerary with impact assessment at Palazzo Medici Riccardi (Florence, Italy)." In 2012 18th International Conference on Virtual Systems and Multimedia (VSMM). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/vsmm.2012.6365901.

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