Full description not available
K**Y
as advertised
The book was in perfect condition.
P**O
Revelatory Reexamination of the Renaissance
Were Britisher Lisa Jardine resident on this side of the Pond, she would be familiar in our mouths as household words, celebrated in print and film and certified a MacArthurian genius. As it is, she is simply the author of stimulating, beautifully conceived and compiled, engagingly written works of revisionist history with a uniquely, appealingly literary twist. Worldly Goods looks at the Renaissance through its material traces and transactions, focusing on the immortal works of art, yes, but using them forensically as primary depictions of a burgeoning material culture that invariably gets lost in our customary focus on "humanism" and the great "humanists." And the artistic evidence Jardine considers includes jewelry, tapestries, books, maps, and the full range of opulent artifacts that, assembled in display, demonstrated the stature of the owner to his or her beholders.In an imaginative preface, Jardine creates a powerful hook, taking the reader across the surface of Carlo Crivelli's lovely "Annunciation with St. Emidius," then diving deeply to a close analysis of the imagery. What Jardine calls attention to is not the prayerful Virgin with downcast eyes or the calling Archangel at the point of "Ave!" but to the contemporary urban Italian setting of the meeting. Here we are not, as you may think, on familiar ground - "Oh, I know - Leonardo gives his Annunciation a well-known, but anachronistic, Tuscan background because that's what the era's painters KNEW" - because Jardine's analytic eye is on the profusion of lovely objects that literally spills into the street from the marble- and terracotta-clad house in which Mary prays: rugs, vases, hanging tapestries, wall and ceiling paneling, finely tooled books, ornamental plants, a peacock. And among these objects are items contemporary viewers would have immediately recognized as the especially prized and precious products of international commerce: Ottoman rugs, Venetian glass, Spanish tapestry, English broadcloth, and more. This is a commerical civilization in capsule. We are carefully led to join Jardine in concluding that Crivelli, in addition to inspiring a numinous awe in the picture's viewers, almost certainly sought also to create a "frisson of desire at the lavishness of (the) surroundings," in the service of a wealthy patron whose munificence was therein on display.The revelatory point, of course, is Jardine's suggestion that "the impulses which today we disparage as `consumerism' might occupy a respectable place in the characterization of the new Renaissance mind." She prosecutes this thesis with great vigor, imagination, and thoughtful interweaving of evidence from commercial, artistic, scientific, philosophic, and literary sources (which, sadly, receive NO documentation whatsoever except for a bibliography that does not seem comprehensive). The chapter titles tell much of the story - "Conditions for Change: Goods in Profusion," "The Price of Magnificence," "The Triumph of the Book," "New Expertise for Sale," "A Culture of Commodities" - although each is an absolutely brilliant essay that takes its thematic lead from the title but interweaves collateral evidence from diverse sources and field of endeavor.We always knew the great merchant and banking houses were also the major patrons of the Raphaels, Michaelangelos, and Leonardos and that all the geniuses of artistic beauty worked for commissions. We understood less, however, how thoroughly commercial the era was, how its opulence functioned, and how the spread of learning and beauty was born on commercial wings, for profit, as a series of commercial transactions. In our own time we've debated endlessly the question "Can `commercial' also be `art'?" And we've taken this issue up with just as much heat when discussing any potential "sell-out," high or low, from Julian Schnabel to Green Day. But the answer to this great question, driven home again and again in Lisa Jardine's spectacular book, is "of course, dummy."(In addition to the unfortunately lack of scholarly trappings, the book's other failing, which I note parenthetically, is the inclusion of illustrations that from time to time are too small to assist the reader in following Jardine's close visual analysis, an absolutely essential aspect of this work. On the other hand, from time to time, as in her wonderful analysis of Holbein's The Ambassadors, she includes the necessary color plates, plus numerous black and white details, that powerfully advance the analysis. Although beautifully produced, Worldly Goods would be even better in folio - something to hope for - with larger illustrations and many, many more color plates.)Why not bring Professor Jardine to the US of A (the combined Florence, Venice, Rome, and Antwerp of our time) for a few years - which of our major research universities wouldn't like having her on its faculty for a spell? Or how if our own patron creates the position of "amazon.com fellow" at Harvard, Yale, or Princeton? - and drop a MacArthur on her (she needs to be working here for that to happen), simultaneously certifying her genius and deservedly enriching her. She'd understand perfectly.
D**N
Humanism, meet humanity.
This is truly an amazing bool -- it is very well-written and wonderfully researched -- with an extraordinarily clear-headed view of the Renaissance that takes into account its major economic underpinnings.For some idea that seems to anger some people -- which is fairly puzzling, since all it does is establish the fact (if it were not already obvious) that the "modern consumerism" people love to rend their garments about did not suddenly roar into life with the opening of Macy's. (News flash: it didn't roar into life with the Renaissance, either.) Part of the cachet of culture lies in the way it disguises the idea that money has anything to do with it (which makes it a different form of commodity than money), and perhaps some are irritated that Jardine's brilliant book opens the books on this mythology. It doesn't take anything away from the Renaissance for me; to me it only lends depth to my art history education, and if you ask me it should be read by every art history and economics student in the world.
J**L
The more things change, the more they stay the same...
As someone who has been teaching the history of the arts for many years, the Renaissance is often a frustrating period to teach. Most of the histories stress the "Great Men" approach, discussing the "genius" of Leonardo, Michaelangelo, et al, as though these dudes had been beamed into Italy from the planet Krypton. Lisa Jardine has finally anchored the artistic and humanistic achievements of the Renaissance in the believable realities of the rise of commodities trading, political gamesmanship, mutlicultural curiosity, and emerging market savvy, making the Renaissance sound remarkably like the present day. Jardine permits us to see Renaissance art in the same terms that the patrons who commissioned these works saw them, which is no small achievement. Her discussion of the relation between Luther's critique of the Pope and the rise of German business interests is quietly brilliant. On top of all this, the book is lusciously illustrated, a treat for the eye as well as the mind. If you think you just don't "get" the Renaissance, you need to read this book, for Jardine has provided us with insights not just into the past, but into how we think and act today.
D**.
Save your money.
Waste of time and money. Book rambles badly; seems to have no point.
O**Y
Worldly Goods is Another Hit for Jardine!!!
I have several of Lisa Jardine's books. They are all very good, and worth the read. She has a great way of writing. She's easy to read, but also very interesting. She's got that "nack" to keep you wanting more. Her books are hard to put down.
A**R
Four Stars
A helpful read about the Renaissance.
R**K
A new look at a new age
Lisa Jardine gets in the last word on the Renaissance and it is well-written. Add to that a timely delivery at a great price and you have an excellent buy.
B**T
but this is not very good at all
I don’t know who the reviewers are who gave this 5 stars, or what they were looking at, but this is not very good at all.This seems to be mostly a rehash of other work. I admit that I only got two thirds of the way through before abandoning it, but I found very little material that I hadn’t encountered elsewhere, in older writing. It’s like someone spent a year in a library then wrote up their notes. That’s the feeling I got from the writing, as well. There doesn’t seem to be a thesis here, or even an informed grasp of the broader topic to guide the writing: item follows item follows item in a way that seems designed to do little more than get everything in. In the process, some dodgy points get made simply from the act of linking things up. Artist X did this work for the Ottomans… so there was routine contact between them and Europe. Really? It’s not as if this is a new area, either. Historians of material culture have been studying this stuff for decades, resulting in different, sometimes competing accounts and explanations, but none of that is evident here. It is hard to believe this was written by an actual historian.And the reviews are strange. Half of them go on about the book’s pretty pictures, and the fact that it is printed on good quality paper. One comments on how it isn’t the usual ‘great man’ account of renaissance art: since a) ‘great man’ accounts haven’t been usual for more than forty years, and b) this is not a book about renaissance art, you have to wonder if they even looked at it before writing their review.In other circumstances, I might have given this a second star just for the pretty pictures – but if other people can give this five, in the spirit of balance I have to give it one.
D**I
Academic but readable
This book was recommended to me by my tutor at the Open University when I was doing research on the Renaissance / Reformation. It's academic but highly readable. The illustrations are excellent. I particularly liked the chapter on how Martin Luther was able to mount his challenge on the established church by means of printed pamphlets - made possible by the relatively new printing presses of the day. Well worth a look - or even reading for pleasure if you like serious history.
C**S
A fresh perspective on the Renaissance
I enjoyed this book immensely. The author takes a different look on the Renaissance. It is enjoyable, informative and should attract a wide readership. Furthermore, it is beautifully produced with relevant illustrations and easy format design. Highly recommended.
K**S
Good value for money
Extremely detailed and a thorough take on the money side of Renaissance
R**E
Trade in the Renaissance and how they got their money
A very useful book for those studying Renaissance Art. It gives context and background to the past
TrustPilot
2 周前
2 个月前