Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.
To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser.
Venezia e il senso del mare: Percezioni e rappresentazioni, 2023
To the Venetians the sea offered a range of associations, both positive and negative, a duality reinforced by biblical texts. The sea was the route to the riches of maritime trade and the way to the Holy Land, and its waters yielded both fish and salt. On the other hand, seafaring brought the dangers of storms, shipwreck, piracy and war. The sensual qualities of the sea penetrated deeply into Venetian life and culture. This chapter considers how artists from the thirteenth to the eighteenth century addressed the cultural and visual properties of the maritime world, from the mosaics of San Marco to the seascapes of the view-painters of the Settecento. Representations of stormy seas by Palma il Vecchio, Titian and Tintoretto offered a dramatic contrast to sunnier maritime scenes, and mirrored the polarities between the sea’s dangers and benefits.
Victorian Studies, 2004
Renaissance Quarterly, 2006
Art & Perception, 2020
Perspective plays an important role in the creation and appreciation of depth on paper and canvas. Paintings of extant scenes are interesting objects for studying perspective, because such paintings provide insight into how painters apply different aspects of perspective in creating highly admired paintings. In this regard the paintings of the Piazza San Marco in Venice by Canaletto in the eighteenth century are of particular interest because of the Piazza's extraordinary geometry, and the fact that Canaletto produced a number of paintings from similar but not identical viewing positions throughout his career. Canaletto is generally regarded as a great master of linear perspective. Analysis of nine paintings shows that Canaletto almost perfectly constructed perspective lines and vanishing points in his paintings. Accurate reconstruction is virtually impossible from observation alone because of the irregular quadrilateral shape of the Piazza. Use of constructive tools is discussed. The geometry of Piazza San Marco is misjudged in three paintings, questioning their authenticity. Sizes of buildings and human figures deviate from the rules of linear perspective in many of the analysed paintings. Shadows are stereotypical in all and even impossible in two of the analysed paintings. The precise perspective lines and vanishing points in combination with the variety of sizes for buildings and human figures may provide insight in the employed production method and the perceptual experience of a given scene.
2005
This paper explores the connections between travel, heritage and photography. It suggests that the increasingly restless and expanding audience for heritage is directed by a yearning for closeness. The heritage tourist is driven by the perception that what is longed for is not to be found in the immediate surroundings; indeed the heritage industry feeds on the fact of distance
Formations of Identity: Society, Politics and Landscape, 2016
The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, 2012
Estudios in memoriam del prof. Manuel Iglesias Cubría. Universidad de Oviedo, Servicio de Publicaciones, 1994, pp. 359-375., 1994
Przestrzenie Teorii, 2007
Doğumunun 140. Yılında Ömer Seyfettin, 2024
IntechOpen eBooks, 2024
Dil ve Edebiyat, 2024
Zbornik Narodnog muzeja Srbije, 2023
J Adolescent Health, 2006
Revista de Economia e Sociologia Rural, 2009
International Journal of Advanced Research, 2018
The Accounting Review, 2008
International journal of metalcasting, 2024
EPiC Series in Computing
JAIDS Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, 2014