| "This
well-written book makes valuable reading for anyone with a serious
interest in the history of art and of the Church during the Renaissance."-Kathleen
Weil-Garris Brandt, New York University
"An extremely important contribution to our understanding of one
of the major monuments of the Italian Renaissance. Carol Lewine's
exposition of the connections between the Roman liturgy and the
Sistine Chapel wall decorations is so clear and convincing that
the reader must remember that no scholar has ever traced them and
developed their implications. The erudition and research necessary
to unravel the different levels of meaning were daunting enough
so that no one tried it. I expect Lewine's analysis will stimulate
re-evaluation of Renaissance church and chapel decoration."-Sarah
Blake McHam, Rutgers University
It has long been understood that the fifteenth-century pictorial
cycles on the walls of the Sistine Chapel bear a freight of symbolic
meaning beyond the narrative they convey. Professor Lewine now proposes
that the frescoes encode the text and themes of the Lenten and Easter
liturgies celebrated in the papal chapel. As a scholar of early
medieval art, she brings perspectives to bear on the problem that
may be somewhat less familiar to students of later art.
Her approach to the interpretation of visual images in terms of
their liturgical significance is in itself important and her argument,
grounded in close visual inspection of the paintings, is ingenious
and provocative. Her analyses of the interactions among narrative
and symbol, text and image, form and meaning, offer stimulating
contributions to quattrocento studies and encourage further consideration
of all the decoration of the Sistine Chapel, together, as parts
of an evolving ensemble. |
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