This chapter investigates how the Italian author Pietro Aretino (1492-1556) forged his private life into an instrument of self-fashioning. It concentrates on the two Venetian homes the author arranged for his personal life, and examines how over the years these spaces were turned into dwellings to be used for private occasions, for inner circle gatherings, and for public appearances, both in real life and in the semi-realistic / semi-fictional self-presentation of his Letters. Based on the extant documentation on the lay-out and decoration of these apartments, as well as on the surviving reports by visitors, the chapter considers these spaces as conscious and well-targeted instances of Aretino's constant policy to project an image of his pr...
In the context of the considerable production and dissemination of devotional literature in post-Tri...
The essay examines the function of epigraphical decorations in the houses built by some of the most ...
The chapter describes and assesses the European reception of Pietro Aretino (1492-1556
This chapter investigates how the Italian author Pietro Aretino (1492-1556) forged his private life ...
This paper examines how public conflict and private attack became interfused for Pietro Aretino in 1...
(in English): This work describes a Renaissance comparison of individual types of art - paragone, in...
The political and religious context of early sixteenth century Rome is crucial for our interpretatio...
This article explores Pietro Aretino’s pasquinade production as a crucial phase in the construction ...
On the basis of the wealth of information about luxury goods and their creators already found inside...
International audienceIn 1551 and 1552, Pietro Aretino had his religious works re-edited and printed...
Pietro Aretino (1492-1556) was an Italian writer who was one of the first to make a living from the...
Il contributo si propone di analizzare la produzione letteraria del Cinquecento e del Seicento, prev...
This chapter describes and analyzes the ambivalent reception of the Italian author Pietro Aretino (1...
The paper focuses on a section of the first book of Aretino’s Lettere, a small group of dedication l...
As a reflection of life, comedy is a particularly appropriate genre. In the Ariosto theatre, which m...
In the context of the considerable production and dissemination of devotional literature in post-Tri...
The essay examines the function of epigraphical decorations in the houses built by some of the most ...
The chapter describes and assesses the European reception of Pietro Aretino (1492-1556
This chapter investigates how the Italian author Pietro Aretino (1492-1556) forged his private life ...
This paper examines how public conflict and private attack became interfused for Pietro Aretino in 1...
(in English): This work describes a Renaissance comparison of individual types of art - paragone, in...
The political and religious context of early sixteenth century Rome is crucial for our interpretatio...
This article explores Pietro Aretino’s pasquinade production as a crucial phase in the construction ...
On the basis of the wealth of information about luxury goods and their creators already found inside...
International audienceIn 1551 and 1552, Pietro Aretino had his religious works re-edited and printed...
Pietro Aretino (1492-1556) was an Italian writer who was one of the first to make a living from the...
Il contributo si propone di analizzare la produzione letteraria del Cinquecento e del Seicento, prev...
This chapter describes and analyzes the ambivalent reception of the Italian author Pietro Aretino (1...
The paper focuses on a section of the first book of Aretino’s Lettere, a small group of dedication l...
As a reflection of life, comedy is a particularly appropriate genre. In the Ariosto theatre, which m...
In the context of the considerable production and dissemination of devotional literature in post-Tri...
The essay examines the function of epigraphical decorations in the houses built by some of the most ...
The chapter describes and assesses the European reception of Pietro Aretino (1492-1556