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Item – Theses Canada
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Item – Theses Canada
OCLC number
1033009756
Link(s) to full text
LAC copy
LAC copy
Author
Tsoumis, Karine,1981-
Title
Bernardino Licinio : Portraiture, Kinship and Community in Renaissance Venice.
Degree
(PhD)--University of Toronto, 2013.
Publisher
Toronto : University of Toronto, 2013.
Description
1 online resource
Notes
Includes bibliographical references.
Abstract
Bernardino Licinio was a painter of Bergamasque origin active in Venice from c. 1510 to c. 1550. Licinio was a prolific painter of portraits, concert scenes and religious images for the home and headed a prosperous family workshop. Yet the artist is largely denied importance within the current art historical narrative, being conceived as "minor," "provincial" or "second-rate." My dissertation questions the "constructedness" of historical identities and presents the first nuanced understanding of Licinio's place within Venetian culture. I argue that his status as "minor" is a modern construct rather than a reflection of his contemporaries' perception. My dissertation inscribes itself within endeavours to "de-centre" the Renaissance conceptually, and is especially indebted to recent studies of material culture that challenge art historical hierarchies and aesthetic biases. The dissertation provides a multilayered reading of Bernardino Licinio's artistic identity through frameworks that stem from what I consider unique aspects of his practice, while others arise from problems posed by his historiographical reception. The artist's position between Venice and Bergamo provides the line of enquiry for chapter one, where I engage with the Bergamasque community conceived, on the one hand, as a form of historiographical framing, and on the other, as a social reality. In chapter two, music as a cultural phenomenon provides a frame for exploring Licinio's intellectual world. I contend that his engagement with musical themes suggests an involvement with the communities of interest fostered by music as a social act. Chapter three addresses Licinio's hitherto unrecognised contribution to shaping a tradition of female portraiture. The chapter thus challenges the accepted conceit of women's "artistic invisibility" in Venetian art, while simultaneously highlighting Licinio's role in forming the genre of family portraiture. Chapter four presents a case study of two images where the artist talks about himself and his family: the Portrait of Arrigo and Agnese Licinio with their Children and the Self-Portrait with Workshop. Through these portraits, I explore the convergence of familial and professional identities, the conceptual ties between the home and the family, and the structures of kinship that provided the foundation for the Renaissance workshop.
Other link(s)
tspace.library.utoronto.ca
hdl.handle.net
Subject
Early Modern Art.
Venice.
Bernardino Licinio.
Portraiture.
Bergamo.
Kinship.
Immigration.
Painting.
Renaissance.
Date modified:
2022-09-01