Art

Re-Mapping the Italian Renaissance



Stephen Campbell, Professor and Chair of the Department of Art History at Johns Hopkins University, presents the first of four lectures in the Louise Smith Bross Lecture Series on May 8, 2012, at the Art Institute of Chicago. This lecture entitled “Re-Mapping the Italian Renaissance,” is part of Professor Campbell’s four-part series on the topic “Inventions of Place: Rethinking Peripheral Identities in the Age of Lotto and Titian.” Over the course of four lectures, Professor Campbell challenges assumptions about the Italian Renaissance as he examines peripheral personalities in the age of Titian.

Sponsored by the Art History Department at the University of Chicago, the Louise Smith Bross Lecture Series is held triennially and features presentations by internationally renowned scholars on any aspect of pre-1800 European art and architecture. The Louise Smith Bross Memorial Fund, endowed in memory of Louise Smith Bross, PhD ’94, also supports the publication of the lectures by the University of Chicago Press. The Art History Department at the University of Chicago appreciates the generous cooperation of the Art Institute of Chicago in hosting this event.

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3 thoughts on “Re-Mapping the Italian Renaissance
  1. Congratulations to the professor, that was very clear and payed attention to details that a lot of italians totaly ignore (for example when he talks about Mount Varallo, that is very impressive with hundreds of wooden statues from all the Bible)

  2. I just pity the guys that laughed at 29:40 when he explain Loreto: it's not a joke, if you believe or not it doesn't matter, but if you want to understand our artistic culture you have to be respectful of Catholic Church, teology and culture

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