The Venetian sculptor Antonio Canova (1757-1822) was Europe's most celebrated artist from the end of the ancien régime to the early years of the Restoration, an era when the traditional relationship between patrons and artists changed drastically. Christopher M. S. Johns's refreshingly original study explores a neglected facet of Canova's career: the effects of patrons, patronage, and politics on his choice of subjects and manner of working. While other artists produced art in the service of the state, Canova resisted the blandishments of the political powers that commissioned his works.Johns uses letters, diaries, and biographies to establish a political personality for Canova as an individual and an artist of international reputation. Tho...
Research on the European success of Venetian art during the 18th century has above all examined the ...
The volume explores the history of the relations between patrons, intermediaries, and Venetian artis...
The book is dedicated to the sculptor John Gibson (1790-1866) and his relationship with Antonio Cano...
Hailed in his time as the greatest living artist, Antonio Canova (1757-1822) expressed his genius no...
For the celebrations of the two hundred years since the death of Antonio Canova, a precious guide wh...
The paper aims to promote the knowledge of the extraordinary collection of anatomical subject drawin...
This dissertation is a historical study of Gentile Bellini's artistic visit to Constantinople and it...
This article investigates Carl Ludwig Fernow's monograph on the Italian neoclassical sculptor Antoni...
Caroline Bonaparte Murat created an identity for herself through the art that she collected during t...
This thesis examines the city of Rome as a primary context of British sociability and portrait ident...
Le sujet inédit de la thèse repose sur un fonds d’archives. Il questionne la réception du sculpteur ...
On the occasion of the bicentenary celebrations of the death of Antonio Canova (1822-2022), the Pina...
This thesis explores the dynamics of artistic patronage in the mid-seventeenth century in Rome, focu...
The volume explores the history of the relations between patrons, intermediaries, and Venetian artis...
This study demonstrates how royal portraiture functioned during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic war...
Research on the European success of Venetian art during the 18th century has above all examined the ...
The volume explores the history of the relations between patrons, intermediaries, and Venetian artis...
The book is dedicated to the sculptor John Gibson (1790-1866) and his relationship with Antonio Cano...
Hailed in his time as the greatest living artist, Antonio Canova (1757-1822) expressed his genius no...
For the celebrations of the two hundred years since the death of Antonio Canova, a precious guide wh...
The paper aims to promote the knowledge of the extraordinary collection of anatomical subject drawin...
This dissertation is a historical study of Gentile Bellini's artistic visit to Constantinople and it...
This article investigates Carl Ludwig Fernow's monograph on the Italian neoclassical sculptor Antoni...
Caroline Bonaparte Murat created an identity for herself through the art that she collected during t...
This thesis examines the city of Rome as a primary context of British sociability and portrait ident...
Le sujet inédit de la thèse repose sur un fonds d’archives. Il questionne la réception du sculpteur ...
On the occasion of the bicentenary celebrations of the death of Antonio Canova (1822-2022), the Pina...
This thesis explores the dynamics of artistic patronage in the mid-seventeenth century in Rome, focu...
The volume explores the history of the relations between patrons, intermediaries, and Venetian artis...
This study demonstrates how royal portraiture functioned during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic war...
Research on the European success of Venetian art during the 18th century has above all examined the ...
The volume explores the history of the relations between patrons, intermediaries, and Venetian artis...
The book is dedicated to the sculptor John Gibson (1790-1866) and his relationship with Antonio Cano...