The Italian Renaissance (25 page)

In the middle of the sixteenth century, the market system was still very far from having equalled, let alone displaced, the personalized patronage system. For examples of the dominance of the new system, we have to wait till the seventeenth century, to the commercial opera houses of Venice and the art market of the Dutch Republic.

It is impossible to give a direct answer to the question whether the arts flourished in Renaissance Italy because of the patrons, as Filarete suggests in the epigraph to this chapter, or in spite of them, as is implied by Michelangelo. What can be discussed, however, is the somewhat complicated relation between patronage and the unequal distribution of artistic achievement among different parts of Italy.

In the previous chapter, it was suggested that art flourished in Florence and Venice in particular because these cities produced many of their own artists. This is not the whole story. Besides ‘producer cities’ there were also ‘consumer cities’ that acted as magnets, attracting artists and writers from elsewhere.
109
Rome is the obvious example, and the patronage of the popes (notably Nicholas V and Leo X) and of the cardinals is the obvious explanation.
110
Urbino, Mantua and Ferrara are other famous examples of cities with few important native artists which nevertheless became important cultural centres.
111
In these three small courts the stimulus came from the patron, from the ruler or his wife. In Urbino, it was Federigo da Montefeltro who made the arts important by attracting Luciano Laurana from Dalmatia, Piero della Francesca from Borgo San Sepolcro, Justus from Ghent, and Francesco di Giorgio from Siena. In Mantua, Isabella d’Este and her husband gave commissions, as we have seen,
to Bellini, Carpaccio, Giorgione, Leonardo, Mantegna, Perugino, Titian and other non-Mantuans. Their only Mantuan painter was a minor master, Lorenzo Leombruno.
112

In these ‘court cities’, the patron seems to be calling art into existence where there was none before. However, two qualifications to this thesis need to be borne in mind. The first is that such patronage was parasitic on the art of major centres such as Florence and Venice in the sense that it would have been impossible without them. The second qualification is that the achievements of princely patrons rarely outlived them. Alfonso of Aragon, for example, was an effective patron in many fields. He took five humanists into his permanent service (Panormita, Fazio, Valla and the Decembrio brothers). He built up a chapel of twenty-two singers and paid his organist the unusually large sum of 120 ducats a year. He invited the painter Pisanello to his court in Naples and commissioned works from major sculptors such as Mino da Fiesole and Francesco Laurana. He bought Flemish tapestries and Venetian glass.
113
The death of Alfonso ‘brought an end to the halcyon days of Neapolitan humanism’, because the King’s son and successor ‘did not support men of learning and culture on as grand a scale’, while Neapolitan nobles did not follow Alfonso’s example and take an interest in patronage.
114

In contrast to Alfonso, Lorenzo de’Medici had everything in his favour as a patron.
115
Living in Florence, he had instant access to major artists and did not to have to go to the trouble of attracting them from a distance. He was not a lone patron but one of many, great and small. The importance of his patronage has been exaggerated in the past. The issue here, however, is not its extent but its facility. Patronage was structured – easier in some parts of Italy, more difficult in others.

As for the rise of the market, it is likely to have given artists and writers more freedom at the price of more insecurity. It involved the rise of reproduction and even mass production. Yet it may well have encouraged the increasing differentiation of subject matter and individualism of style noted in the first chapter: the exploitation of the artist’s unique qualities in order to catch the eye of a purchaser.

1
  Edwards, ‘Creativity’, distinguishes four types; I have divided his ‘personalized’ system into two.
2
  The vast literature on art patronage includes Burckhardt,
Beiträge
; Wackernagel,
World of the Florentine Renaissance Artist
, pt 2; Renouard, ‘L’artiste ou le client?’; Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
; Baxandall,
Painting and Experience
, pp. 3–14; Logan,
Culture and Society
, ch. 8; Settis, ‘Artisti e committenti’; Gundersheimer, ‘Patronage in the Renaissance’; Goffen,
Piety and Patronage
; Kent and Simons,
Patronage, Art and Society
; Hollingsworth,
Patronage in Renaissance Italy
; Anderson, ‘Rewriting the history’; Welch,
Art and Society
, pp. 103–29; Marchant and Wright,
With and Without the Medici
; Christian and Drogin,
Patronage
. On music, Bridgman,
Vie musicale
, ch. 1; Fenlon,
Music and Patronage
; and Feldman,
City Culture
, pp. 3–82.
3
  Müntz,
Collections des Médicis
.
4
  Baron, ‘Historical background’; Haines, ‘Brunelleschi and bureaucracy’ and ‘Market for public sculpture’.
5
  Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, nos. 20–30; for Venice, Humfrey and MacKenney, ‘Venetian trade guilds’.
6
  Pignatti,
Scuole di Venezia
; Eisenbichler,
Crossing the Boundaries
; Esposito, ‘Confraternite romane’; Wisch and Ahl,
Confraternities and the Visual Arts
.
7
  Molmenti and Ludwig,
Vittore Carpaccio
;
8
  Pullan,
Rich and Poor
, pp. 119ff.; Brown,
Venetian Narrative Painting
.
9
  Logan,
Culture and Society
, pp. 181ff.; Howard,
Jacopo Sansovino
; Hope,
Titian
, p. 98.
10
  Lorenzi,
Monumenti
, pp. 157–65; Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, nos. 42–3.
11
  Cohn, ‘Renaissance attachment to things’, pp. 988–9.
12
  Lotto,
Libro
, pp. 28, 50.
13
  Cohn, ‘Renaissance attachment to things’, p. 989. Cf. Wackernagel,
World of the Florentine Renaissance Artist
, p. 10.
14
  Braghirolli, ‘Carteggio di Isabella d’Este’; Cartwright,
Isabella d’Este
; Fletcher, ‘Isabella d’Este’; Brown, ‘Ferrarese lady’; Reiss and Wilkins,
Beyond Isabella
; Campbell,
Cabinet of Eros
; Ames-Lewis,
Isabella and Leonardo
.
15
  Roberts,
Dominican Women
; McIver,
Women, Art and Architecture
, pp. 63–106.
16
  King,
Renaissance Women Patrons
.
17
  Gaye,
Carteggio inedito d’artisti
, vol. 1, p. 136; Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, no. 46.
18
  ffoulkes and Maiocchi,
Vincenzo Foppa
, pp. 300ff.; Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, nos. 41–2.
19
  Welch,
Art and Authority
.
20
  Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, no. 95.
21
  Gaye,
Carteggio inedito d’artisti
, vol. 1, p. 256; Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, no. 51.
22
  Lopez, ‘Hard times and investment’; cf. Goldthwaite,
Building of Renaissance Florence
, pp. 397ff.
23
  Burke, ‘Investment and culture’.
24
  Bourdieu,
Distinction
; Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, no. 107.
25
  Wackernagel,
World of the Florentine Renaissance Artist
, p. 245n.
26
  Haskell,
Patrons and Painters
, pp. 249ff.
27
  Filarete,
Treatise on Architecture
, p. 106.
28
  Machiavelli,
Prince
, ch. 21.
29
  Alsop,
Rare Art Traditions
.
30
  Carboni Baiardi,
Federico di Montefeltro
; Kent,
Cosimo de’ Medici
.
31
  Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, no. 91.
32
  Settis,
Giorgione’s Tempest
, pp. 129ff.
33
  Logan,
Culture and Society
, p. 157.
34
  Baxandall, ‘Guarino, Pisanello and Manuel Chrysoloras’.
35
  Kent,
Cosimo de’ Medici
, pp. 5, 331–2.
36
  Crowe and Cavalcaselle,
Life and Times of Titian
, p. 181.
37
  Kemp,
Behind the Picture
, pp. 33–46; Welch,
Art and Society
, pp. 103–14; Gilbert, ‘What did the Renaissance patron buy?’, pp. 393–8; O’Malley,
Business of Art
.
38
  Shearman,
Andrea del Sarto
, doc. 30.
39
  Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, nos. 123–7.
40
  Malaguzzi-Valeri,
Pittori Lombardi
; Chambers,
Patrons and Artsts
, nos. 96–100.
41
  Crowe and Cavalcaselle,
Life and Times of Titian
, pp. 183–4. I have modified the translation.
42
  Bodart,
Tiziano e Federico II Gonzaga
.
43
  Hartt,
Giulio Romano
, vol. 1, pp. 74–5; original text in D’Arco,
Giulio Pippi Romano
, appendix.
44
  O’Malley,
Business of Art
, pp. 90–6.
45
  Ruda,
Fra Filippo Lippi
, pp. 525–6.
46
  Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, no. 107.
47
  Ibid., nos. 5, 68, 86, 101, 113, 137, etc.
48
  Ibid., no.99.
49
  ffoulkes and Maiocchi,
Vincenzo Foppa
.
50
  Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, no. 76.
51
  O’Malley,
Business of Art
, p. 180.
52
  Tolnay,
Michelangelo
.
53
  Shearman,
Andrea del Sarto
, doc. 30 and pp. 47–51.
54
  Poggi,
Duomo di Firenze
; Gaye,
Carteggio inedito d’artisti
, vol. 1, p. 191; Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, no. 49.
55
  Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, nos. 64–72; Braghirolli, ‘Carteggio di Isabella d’Este’; Fletcher, ‘Isabella d’Este’; Ames-Lewis,
Isabella and Leonardo
, pp. viii, 34.
56
  Kemp,
Leonardo da Vinci
, pp. 78ff.
57
  Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, nos. 59–60.
58
  Gilbert, ‘What did the Renaissance patron buy?’, pp. 416–23.
59
  Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, nos. 85–90.
60
  Gombrich,
Symbolic Images
, pp. 9–11, 23–5; cf. Robertson, ‘Annibal Caro’.
61
  Warburg,
Renewal of Pagan Antiquity
.
62
  Krautheimer and Krautheimer-Hess,
Lorenzo Ghiberti
, pp. 169ff.; Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, no. 24.
63
  Baxandall, ‘Guarino, Pisanello and Manuel Chrysoloras’.
64
  Warburg,
Renewal of Pagan Antiquity
, pp. 249–69. Cf. Gombrich,
Symbolic Images
; Dempsey,
Portrayal of Love
; Snow-Smith,
Primavera of Sandro Botticelli
.
65
  Condivi,
Vita di Michelangelo Buonarroti
, pp. 28–9.
66
  Chambers,
Patrons and Artists
, nos. 76, 80.
67
  Zimmermann,
Paolo Giovio
.
68
  A more sceptical view of the importance of the humanist adviser is to be found in Hope, ‘Artists, patrons and advisers’; Robertson, ‘Annibal Caro’; Hope and McGrath, ‘Artists and humanists’.
69
  Kent, ‘Palaces, politics and society’; Frommel,
Architettura e committenza
.
70
  Hersey,
Alfonso II
; Serra-Desfilis, ‘Classical language’; Heydenreich, ‘Federico da Montefeltre’; Clough, ‘Federigo da Montefeltre’s patronage of the arts’.
71
  Brown, ‘Humanist portrait’; cf. Gombrich,
Norm and Form
, pp. 35–57; Jenkins, ‘Cosimo de’Medici’s patronage’; Kent,
Cosimo de’ Medici
.

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