Renaissance in Italy Volume 3

John Addington Symonds
in Italy Vol. 3, by John
Addington Symonds

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Title: Renaissance in Italy Vol. 3 The Fine Arts
Author: John Addington Symonds
Release Date: March 13, 2004 [EBook #11559]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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RENAISSANCE IN ITALY VOL. 3 ***

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RENAISSANCE IN ITALY
THE FINE ARTS
BY

JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS
AUTHOR OF
"AN INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF DANTE", "STUDIES
OF THE GREEK POETS"
AND "SKETCHES IN ITALY AND GREECE"
* * * * *
Dii Romae indigetes, Trojae tuque auctor, Apollo, Unde genus nostrum
coeli se tollit ad astra, Hanc saltem auferri laudem prohibete Latinis:
Artibus emineat semper, studiisque Minervae, Italia, et gentes doceat
pulcherrima Roma; Quandoquidem armorum penitus fortuna recessit,
Tanta Italos inter crevit discordia reges; Ipsi nos inter saevos
distringimus enses, Nec patriam pudet externis aperire tyrannis
VIDA, Poetica, lib. ii.
* * * * *
LONDON
SMITH, ELDER & CO
1899

PREFACE[1]
This third volume of my book on the "Renaissance in Italy" does not
pretend to retrace the history of the Italian arts, but rather to define their
relation to the main movement of Renaissance culture. Keeping this,
the chief object of my whole work, steadily in view, I have tried to
explain the dependence of the arts on mediaeval Christianity at their
commencement, their gradual emancipation from ecclesiastical control,
and their final attainment of freedom at the moment when the classical

revival culminated.
Not to notice the mediaeval period in this evolution would be
impossible; since the revival of Sculpture and Painting at the end of the
thirteenth century was among the earliest signs of that new intellectual
birth to which we give the title of Renaissance. I have, therefore, had to
deal at some length with stages in the development of Architecture,
Sculpture, and Painting, which form a prelude to the proper age of my
own history.
In studying the architectural branch of the subject, I have had recourse
to Fergusson's "Illustrated Handbook of Architecture," to Burckhardt's
"Cicerone," to Grüner's "Terra-Cotta Buildings of North Italy," to
Milizia's "Memorie degli Architetti," and to many illustrated works on
single buildings in Rome, Tuscany, Lombardy, and Venice. For the
history of Sculpture I have used Burckhardt's "Cicerone," and the two
important works of Charles C. Perkins, entitled "Tuscan Sculptors,"
and "Italian Sculptors." Such books as "Le Tre Porte del Battistero di
Firenze," Grüner's "Cathedral of Orvieto," and Lasinio's "Tabernacolo
della Madonna d'Orsammichele" have been helpful by their
illustrations. For the history of Painting I have made use principally of
Vasari's "Vite de' più eccellenti Pittori," &c., in Le Monnier's edition of
Crowe and Cavalcaselle's "History of Painting," of Burckhardt's
"Cicerone," of Rosini's illustrated "Storia della Pittura Italiana," of
Rio's "L'Art Chrétien," and of Henri Beyle's "Histoire de la Peinture en
Italie." I should, however, far exceed the limits of a preface were I to
make a list of all the books I have consulted with profit on the history
of the arts in Italy.
In this part of my work I feel that I owe less to reading than to
observation. I am not aware of having mentioned any important
building, statue, or picture which I have not had the opportunity of
studying. What I have written in this volume about the monuments of
Italian art has always been first noted face to face with the originals,
and afterwards corrected, modified, or confirmed in the course of
subsequent journeys to Italy. I know that this method of composition, if
it has the merit of freshness, entails some inequality of style and

disproportion in the distribution of materials. In the final preparation of
my work for press I have therefore endeavoured, as far as possible, to
compensate this disadvantage by adhering to the main motive of my
subject--the illustration of the Renaissance spirit as this was manifested
in the Arts.
I must add, in conclusion, that Chapters VII. and IX. and Appendix II.
are in part reprinted from the "Westminster," the "Cornhill," and the
"Contemporary."
CLIFTON: March 1877.

CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
THE PROBLEM FOR THE FINE ARTS
Art in Italy and Greece--The Leading Phase of Culture--Æsthetic Type
of Literature--Painting the Supreme Italian Art--Its Task in the
Renaissance--Christian and Classical Traditions--Sculpture for the
Ancients--Painting for the Romance Nations--Mediaeval Faith and
Superstition--The Promise of Painting--How far can the Figurative Arts
express Christian Ideas?--Greek and Christian Religion--Plastic Art
incapable of solving the Problem--A more Emotional Art
needed--Place of
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