In Giuseppe Arcimboldo’s most famous paintings, grapes, fish, and even the beaks of birds form human hair. A pear stands in for a man’s chin. Citrus fruits sprout from a tree trunk that doubles as a neck. All sorts of natural phenomena come together on canvas and panel to assemble the strange heads and faces that constitute one of Renaissance art’s most striking oeuvres. The first major study in a generation of the artist behind these remarkable paintings, Arcimboldo tells the singular story of their creation.
Drawing on his thirty-five-year engagement with the artist, Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann begins with an overview of Arcimboldo’s life and work, exploring the artist’s early years in sixteenth-century Lombardy, his grounding in Leonardesque traditions, and his tenure as a Habsburg court portraitist in Vienna and Prague. Arcimboldo then trains its focus on the celebrated composite heads, approaching them as visual jokes with serious underpinnings—images that poetically display pictorial wit while conveying an allegorical message. In addition to probing the humanistic, literary, and philosophical dimensions of these pieces, Kaufmann explains that they embody their creator’s continuous engagement with nature painting and natural history. He reveals, in fact, that Arcimboldo painted many more nature studies than scholars have realized—a finding that significantly deepens current interpretations of the composite heads.
Demonstrating the previously overlooked importance of these works to natural history and still-life painting, Arcimboldo finally restores the artist’s fantastic visual jokes to their rightful place in the history of both science and art.
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Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann is the Frederick Marquand Professor of Art and Archaeology at Princeton University. His many books include Toward a Geography of Art, also published by the University of Chicago Press.
"With characteristically probing scholarship and the discovery of new Arcimboldo nature studies, Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann illuminates the fascinating interplay of Giuseppe Arcimboldo’s aspirations in the realms of antiquity, literature, imperial glorification, and natural history. Kaufmann shows that many of Arcimboldo’s works were simultaneously models of imitative naturalism and ingenious fantasy. In so doing, he gives Arcimboldo his due as a learned and ambitious artist who was central to the origins of nature study and independent still life."
(Pamela H. Smith, Columbia University)"In this remarkable new book, Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann manages to show that Giuseppe Arcimboldo, often considered a sort of surrealist avant la lettre, was actually an instrumental figure in the origins of still life painting. Moreover, Kaufmann convincingly links Arcimboldo’s work to the nascent discipline of Renaissance natural history, which stressed the detailed depiction of natural objects ad vivum. Building on his decades as a consummate Arcimboldo scholar, Kaufmann succeeds in drawing together the complex facets of the painter’s life in order to reveal a composite figure as detailed and variegated as one of Arcimboldo’s own teste composte. The result is a far-reaching volume that will appeal as much to historians of science and culture as to those in the history of art."
(William R. Newman, Indiana University)"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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