The Courtauld Institute of Art
London
Somerset House - Strand
020 7848 2526
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Love and marriage in renaissance Florence
dal 11/2/2009 al 16/5/2009

Segnalato da

Annie Roper



 
calendario eventi  :: 




11/2/2009

Love and marriage in renaissance Florence

The Courtauld Institute of Art, London

The Courtauld wedding chests. A marriage in 15th century Florence was not primarily about love or religion. Instead it was a dynastic alliance between powerful families. To celebrate these marriages, pairs of great chests, lavishly decorated with precious metals and elaborate paintings, were commissioned... Special display: Design drawings from hight Reinassance Italy.


comunicato stampa

A marriage in 15th century Florence was not primarily about love or religion. Instead it was a dynastic alliance between powerful families. To celebrate these marriages, pairs of great chests, lavishly decorated with precious metals and elaborate paintings, were commissioned. These items – now generally called cassoni – were often the most expensive of a whole suite of decorative objects commissioned to celebrate marriage alliances between powerful families. They were displayed in Florentine palaces and used to store precious items such as clothes and textiles.

The painted panels set into the wedding chests tell fascinating tales from ancient Greece, Rome and Palestine, as well as from Florentine literature and more recent history. These beautifully told stories were intended to entertain as well as to instruct husband and wife, their servants, children and visitors. .

This exhibition is the first in the UK to explore this important and neglected art form of Renaissance Florence. The exhibition is focused around two of The Courtauld’s great treasures: the pair of chests ordered in 1472 by the Florentine Lorenzo Morelli to celebrate his marriage with Vaggia Nerli. These are the only pair of cassoni to be still displayed with their painted backboards (spalliere).The unusual survival of both the chests and their commissioning documents enables a full examination of this remarkable commission.

The Courtauld cassoni are displayed alongside other superb examples of chests and panels. Discover the stories behind these chests and gain rich insights into Florentine art and life at the height of the city’s glory.

Exhibition Benefactors:
Madeleine and Timothy Plaut

Exhibition Supporters:
The Italian Cultural Institute
The Samuel H. Kress Foundation
Hugues and Emmanuelle Lepic
The Michael Marks Charitable Trust

Special display:
Design drawings from hight Reinassance Italy

This display presents rarely seen Italian 16th century design drawings for furniture, household objects and architectural ornaments.

Selected from The Courtauld’s extensive collection, these drawings illustrate the increasing use of classical motifs in High Renaissance designs. They also testify to the increasing professionalism of design in the High Renaissance, when the artist who was commissioned to design an object was often a different person from the craftsman who executed the design. This tradition of collaborative design has particular relevance in today’s artistic climate, where the line between functional object and work of art has become ever less marked.

For further information and images please contact:
Sue Bond Public Relations
Hollow Lane Farmhouse, Thurston, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk IP31 3RQ, UK Tel. +44 (0)1359 271085, Fax. +44 (0)1359 271934 E-mail. info@suebond.co.uk

Courtauld Institute
Somerset House - Strand - London

IN ARCHIVIO [22]
Richard Serra
dal 18/9/2013 al 11/1/2014

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