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Andrea Fulvio's Illustrium Imagines and the Beginnings of Classical Archaeology
Barnes and Noble
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Andrea Fulvio's Illustrium Imagines and the Beginnings of Classical Archaeology in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $129.00

Barnes and Noble
Andrea Fulvio's Illustrium Imagines and the Beginnings of Classical Archaeology in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $129.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
Andrea Fulvio’s
Illustrium imagines
and the Beginnings of Classical Archaeology
is a study of the book recognized by contemporaries as the first attempt (1517) to publish artifacts from Classical Antiquity in the form of a chronology of portraits appearing on coins. By studying correspondences between the illustrated coins and genuine, ancient coins, Madigan parses Fulvio’s methodology, showing how he attempted to exploit coins as historical documents. Situated within humanist literary and historical studies of ancient Rome, his numismatic project required visual artists closely to study and assimilate the conventions of ancient portraiture. The
exemplifies the range and complexity of early modern responses to ancient artifacts.
Illustrium imagines
and the Beginnings of Classical Archaeology
is a study of the book recognized by contemporaries as the first attempt (1517) to publish artifacts from Classical Antiquity in the form of a chronology of portraits appearing on coins. By studying correspondences between the illustrated coins and genuine, ancient coins, Madigan parses Fulvio’s methodology, showing how he attempted to exploit coins as historical documents. Situated within humanist literary and historical studies of ancient Rome, his numismatic project required visual artists closely to study and assimilate the conventions of ancient portraiture. The
exemplifies the range and complexity of early modern responses to ancient artifacts.
Andrea Fulvio’s
Illustrium imagines
and the Beginnings of Classical Archaeology
is a study of the book recognized by contemporaries as the first attempt (1517) to publish artifacts from Classical Antiquity in the form of a chronology of portraits appearing on coins. By studying correspondences between the illustrated coins and genuine, ancient coins, Madigan parses Fulvio’s methodology, showing how he attempted to exploit coins as historical documents. Situated within humanist literary and historical studies of ancient Rome, his numismatic project required visual artists closely to study and assimilate the conventions of ancient portraiture. The
exemplifies the range and complexity of early modern responses to ancient artifacts.
Illustrium imagines
and the Beginnings of Classical Archaeology
is a study of the book recognized by contemporaries as the first attempt (1517) to publish artifacts from Classical Antiquity in the form of a chronology of portraits appearing on coins. By studying correspondences between the illustrated coins and genuine, ancient coins, Madigan parses Fulvio’s methodology, showing how he attempted to exploit coins as historical documents. Situated within humanist literary and historical studies of ancient Rome, his numismatic project required visual artists closely to study and assimilate the conventions of ancient portraiture. The
exemplifies the range and complexity of early modern responses to ancient artifacts.
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