TOC 26.05.2016

I Tatti Studies in Renaissance History

Jonathan Nelson, Villa I Tatti - The Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies

Special Issue: “Shared Spaces and Knowledge Transactions in the Italian Renaissance City”
Guest Editors: Roisin Cossar, Filippo de Vivo, and Christina Neilson

This issue is dedicated to the memory of Shona Kelly Wray, I Tatti Fellow in 2011–12

• Jane Tylus, Editor’s Note, pp. 1–3
• Roisin Cossar, Filippo de Vivo, Christina Neilson, Introduction, pp. 5-22
• Roisin Cossar, Venetian Notaries, Space, and Sociability in the Trecento, pp. 23–39
• Marta Cacho Casal, Bologna alla stanza o in casa mia: Mobility and Shared Space in the Circle of Francesco Albani, pp. 41–62
• Christina Neilson, Demonstrating Ingenuity: The Display and Concealment of Knowledge in Renaissance Artists’ Workshops, pp. 63–91
• Cecilia Hewlett, Locating Contadini in the Renaissance City: Food Circulation and Mobility in the Marketplace, pp. 93–113
• Filippo de Vivo, Walking in Sixteenth-Century Venice: Mobilizing the Early Modern City, pp. 115–141
• Yvonne Elet, Raphael and the Roads to Rome: Designing for Diplomatic Encounters at Villa Madama, pp. 143–175
• Niall Atkinson, Getting Lost in the Italian Renaissance, pp. 177–207
• Dario Tessicini, Viewing the Stars from the Rialto: Astrological Dialogues in Sixteenth-Century Venice, pp. 209–230

Quellennachweis:
TOC: I Tatti Studies in Renaissance History. In: ArtHist.net, 26.05.2016. Letzter Zugriff 19.04.2024. <https://arthist.net/archive/13109>.

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