Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2228047843> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 64 of
64
with 100 items per page.
- W2228047843 endingPage "275" @default.
- W2228047843 startingPage "257" @default.
- W2228047843 abstract "In Book VI of Metamorphoses Ovid makes only a passing reference to the myth of Jupiter transformed into a satyr to seduce Antiope. For this reason, at the beginning of sixteenth century its iconographic reconstruction could not depend on the ekphrasis of an ample and detailed literary passage, and to illustrate it artists had to draw on collective memory, a reserve of figurative models at their disposition. Visual resources thus compensated for the concision of a literary source, and classical myths offered further cues for a new and fascinating game of metamorphoses, this time based on the grafting of different meanings onto identical, or at least similar, forms.Artists’ attempts to fill the gap of written tradition in this manner constitute an original chapter of ut pictura poesis. This study permits to reflect on the intersection between visual sources and literary resources in the creative process of image-making, in reference to the specific cases of two representations of Jupiter and Antiope: an engraving made by Gian Giacomo Caraglio, Jupiter Surprising Antiope, and a drawing by Parmigianino, Jupiter in the Form of a Satyr Unveiling Antiope, today in the Louvre. Both executed during the 1520s, to varying degrees they show their debt to the Original Sin in the Sistine Chapel, where the drama of the religious subject and the unusual interpretation given by Michelangelo lends itself to a re-elaboration in scenes of strong erotic content.The first part of the article is focused in particular on the contribution of Parmigianino to Caraglio’s inventio: the long elaboration of the pose of Saint Jerome in Parmigianino’s Madonna with Child, Saint John the Baptist and Saint Jerome, today in the London National Gallery, contributes in fact to the version of Caraglio’s Antiope, providing us with a first example of the cross-pollination of religious and erotic scenes typical of this period.The final part deals with the success as an erotic avatar of the Sistine Eve in examples based on Bolognese engravings and drawings, with particular reference to Agostino and Ludovico Carracci.Through such cases of semantic metamorphoses, it was aimed to underline how the artists under discussion eluded the Roman Church’s prescriptions of decency and decorum both in the years immediately preceding the Sack of Rome and during the Catholic reaction to the Protestant Reformation. Their attempt was made in the name of freedom of artistic creative process and autonomy of their figurative resources." @default.
- W2228047843 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2228047843 creator A5002300306 @default.
- W2228047843 date "2013-01-01" @default.
- W2228047843 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W2228047843 title "Betrayals of the gods and metamorphoses of artists: Parmigianino, Caraglio and Agostino Carracci" @default.
- W2228047843 hasPublicationYear "2013" @default.
- W2228047843 type Work @default.
- W2228047843 sameAs 2228047843 @default.
- W2228047843 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2228047843 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2228047843 hasAuthorship W2228047843A5002300306 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConcept C124952713 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConcept C161191863 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConcept C2777855551 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConcept C41895202 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConcept C519517224 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConcept C52119013 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConcept C523419034 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConcept C527412718 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConceptScore W2228047843C124952713 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConceptScore W2228047843C138885662 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConceptScore W2228047843C142362112 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConceptScore W2228047843C161191863 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConceptScore W2228047843C2777855551 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConceptScore W2228047843C41008148 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConceptScore W2228047843C41895202 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConceptScore W2228047843C519517224 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConceptScore W2228047843C52119013 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConceptScore W2228047843C523419034 @default.
- W2228047843 hasConceptScore W2228047843C527412718 @default.
- W2228047843 hasIssue "68" @default.
- W2228047843 hasLocation W22280478431 @default.
- W2228047843 hasOpenAccess W2228047843 @default.
- W2228047843 hasPrimaryLocation W22280478431 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W1945905381 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W1968684035 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W1991471597 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W2213362257 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W2232486393 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W2240144846 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W2252688450 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W2269239448 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W2270760854 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W2287218979 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W2297069903 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W2332188839 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W2496586671 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W2756947251 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W2802219411 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W3121992858 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W325364848 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W563425926 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W571938103 @default.
- W2228047843 hasRelatedWork W819609706 @default.
- W2228047843 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2228047843 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2228047843 magId "2228047843" @default.
- W2228047843 workType "article" @default.