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Religion & Art, Art Styles & Periods, Renaissance Art, Types of Art, European Art
The Place of Narrative by Lavin — book cover

The Place of Narrative

by Lavin
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Overview

Looking at more than two hundred Italian medieval and Renaissance mural cycles, Lavin examines—with the aid of computer technology—the "rearranged" chronologies of familiar religious stories found therein.

"Like many masterpieces, Lavin's book builds upon a simple idea . . . it is possible to do a computer analysis of . . . visual narratives. . . . This is the first computer-based study of the visual arts of which I am aware that illustrates how those technologies can utterly transform the study of old master art. An extremely important book, one likely to become the most influential recent study of art of this period, The Place of Narrative is also a beautiful artifact."—David Carrier, Leonardo

"Covering over a millennium and dealing with the whole of Italy, Lavin makes pioneering use of new methodology employing a computer database . . . [and] novel terminology to describe the disposition of scenes of church and chapel walls. . . . We should recognize this as a book of high seriousness which reaches out into new areas and which will fruitfully stimulate much thought on a neglected subject of very considerable significance."—Julian Gardner, Burlington Magazine

About the Author, Lavin

Marilyn Aronberg Lavin, professor of the history of art, has taught at Princeton University, Yale University, and the University of Maryland. She is author of Piero della Francesca: The Flagellation.

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Editorials

Booknews

Piero della Francesca's frescoes in the Church of San Francesco in implications of this insight. With 24 color plates, 209 halftones, 58 line drawings. Arezzo have long challenged art historians. Their subject is traditional--the legend of the True Cross--but the sequence of scenes is out of order, at least by the standards of conventional literary narrative. Seeking an explanation for this apparent anomaly, Lavin compiled a computer database of over 200 Italian mural cycles spanning the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. She found that Piero's cycle is part of a long tradition in mural decoration of the chronology of familiar religious stories, and explores the Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
December 1, 1994
Publisher
Chicago ; University of Chicago Press, c1990.
Pages
426
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780226469607

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