Titian Remade

Titian Remade: Repetition and the Transformation of Early Modern Italian Art

Maria H. Loh

2007

202 pages

PDF file size: 30.7 MB


Description

Titian Remade explores imitation and the modern cult of originality through a consideration of the disparate fates of two Venetian painters: the canonized master Titian (ca. 1488–1576) and his artistic heir, the now-unremarked Padovanino (1588–1649). Reading the latter’s Sleeping Venus (1610), Triumph (1620), and Self-Portrait (ca. 1630) against corresponding works by Titian, Maria H. Loh argues the case for repetition as a positive act of artistic self-definition. Her history of creative emulation and engaged viewing in early modern visual culture offers a profound vision of art as a continual process of retrieval and projection that effectively bonds the present to the past and the self to the other.

Table of Contents

  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction. “A Death in Venice”
  • Chapter 1. The “Delicious Nude”: Repetition and Identity
  • Chapter 2. “The Future is History”: Repetition and Difference
  • Chapter 3. Io Triumphe, Io Triumphe: Repetition and Becoming
  • Chapter 4. Ancients and Moderns: Repetition and History
  • Conclusion. Sublime Trees and Deterritorialized Branches
  • Postscript
  • Works Cited
  • Illustration Credits
  • Index

About the Author

Maria H. Loh is lecturer of early modern art at University College London. She received her Ph.D. in the history of art from the University of Toronto. A specialist in Italian art and theory, with a focus on Venice, she has published on theories of authorship, repetition, spectatorship, and desire, and she also writes on contemporary film.