The Tempietto del Clitunno near Spoleto

Nonfiction, History, Italy, Art & Architecture, General Art, Art History
Cover of the book The Tempietto del Clitunno near Spoleto by Judson Emerick, Penn State University Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Judson Emerick ISBN: 9780271044507
Publisher: Penn State University Press Publication: November 13, 1998
Imprint: Penn State University Press Language: English
Author: Judson Emerick
ISBN: 9780271044507
Publisher: Penn State University Press
Publication: November 13, 1998
Imprint: Penn State University Press
Language: English

This is the first full-length study of the enigmatic Early Medieval chapel near the river Clitunno in central Umbria. Judson Emerick makes the Tempietto del Clitunno, a celebrated art-historical test case, the focus of a study that penetrates to the deep structure of the discipline.

For centuries scholars have puzzled over the chapel's lavish Corinthian column screens, the crosses surrounded by Neo-Attic vine scrolls in its pedimental reliefs, and the Christian Latin inscriptions in huge Neo-Augustan block capitals from its friezes. The sixteenth-century humanists who named the building the "Tempietto del Clitunno" treated it as an ancient Roman temple that the Christians later converted. But modern art historians, learning that the Tempietto had been built from the ground up as a chapel, declared it an anomaly, the product of a most startling and unexpected Early Christian and medieval classical revival.

Emerick intervenes by critiquing the notion of classical revival in medieval architecture. Impatient with the old Enlightenment historical plot that makes the Tempietto into a dark-age prodigy, Emerick boldly redescribes the architectural record to take away the Tempietto's strangeness. He shows conclusively that the chapel's orders, pedimental reliefs, and inscriptions conform to ancient Roman Imperial Corinthian standards, but then goes on to show that just this Corinthian decorative system was frequent, even normal in festive, public, Christian cult rooms from Constantine's day down through the twelfth century.

History of style as an end in itself yields here to style treated as political phenomenon. Emerick turns to the frescoes on the Tempietto's rear apse wall for clues to the builders' political goals. He explains how grandees from the medieval Lombardo-Frankish Duchy of Spoleto, full participants in a Christian theocratic state, set up an array of Mediterranean icons inside the Tempietto to enhance their social and political control. The chapel's Corinthian decorative system, he concludes, must be integral to this political program.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

This is the first full-length study of the enigmatic Early Medieval chapel near the river Clitunno in central Umbria. Judson Emerick makes the Tempietto del Clitunno, a celebrated art-historical test case, the focus of a study that penetrates to the deep structure of the discipline.

For centuries scholars have puzzled over the chapel's lavish Corinthian column screens, the crosses surrounded by Neo-Attic vine scrolls in its pedimental reliefs, and the Christian Latin inscriptions in huge Neo-Augustan block capitals from its friezes. The sixteenth-century humanists who named the building the "Tempietto del Clitunno" treated it as an ancient Roman temple that the Christians later converted. But modern art historians, learning that the Tempietto had been built from the ground up as a chapel, declared it an anomaly, the product of a most startling and unexpected Early Christian and medieval classical revival.

Emerick intervenes by critiquing the notion of classical revival in medieval architecture. Impatient with the old Enlightenment historical plot that makes the Tempietto into a dark-age prodigy, Emerick boldly redescribes the architectural record to take away the Tempietto's strangeness. He shows conclusively that the chapel's orders, pedimental reliefs, and inscriptions conform to ancient Roman Imperial Corinthian standards, but then goes on to show that just this Corinthian decorative system was frequent, even normal in festive, public, Christian cult rooms from Constantine's day down through the twelfth century.

History of style as an end in itself yields here to style treated as political phenomenon. Emerick turns to the frescoes on the Tempietto's rear apse wall for clues to the builders' political goals. He explains how grandees from the medieval Lombardo-Frankish Duchy of Spoleto, full participants in a Christian theocratic state, set up an array of Mediterranean icons inside the Tempietto to enhance their social and political control. The chapel's Corinthian decorative system, he concludes, must be integral to this political program.

More books from Penn State University Press

Cover of the book Rural Protest and the Making of Democracy in Mexico, 1968–2000 by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book Eugene O'Neill's Creative Struggle by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book Democracy Without Decency by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book Women and Guerrilla Movements by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book John Dewey and the Artful Life by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book Democratic Philosophy and the Politics of Knowledge by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book Social and Economic Networks in Early Massachusetts by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book The Evolving Citizen by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book Democratic Professionalism by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book Madness and Blake's Myth by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book Sign of Pathology by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book Thinking About Love by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book The Image of Bar Kokhba in Traditional Jewish Literature by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book The Pragmatics and Semiotics of Standard Languages by Judson Emerick
Cover of the book Harnessing Globalization by Judson Emerick
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy