Salvator Rosa: Paint and Performance

Hardback

Main Details

Title Salvator Rosa: Paint and Performance
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Helen Langdon
SeriesRenaissance Lives
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:224
Dimensions(mm): Height 216,Width 138
Category/GenreRenaissance art
Individual artists and art monographs
Literary studies - poetry and poets
ISBN/Barcode 9781789145731
ClassificationsDewey:759.5
Audience
General
Illustrations 65 illustrations, 51 in colour

Publishing Details

Publisher Reaktion Books
Imprint Reaktion Books
Publication Date 11 April 2022
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Painter, poet and actor Salvator Rosa was one of the most engaging and charismatic personalities of seventeenth-century Italy. Although a gifted landscape painter, he longed to be seen as the pre-eminent philosopher-painter of his age. This new account traces Rosa's strategies of self-promotion, and his creation of a new kind of audience for his art. The book describes the startling novelty of his subject matter - witchcraft and divination, as well as prophecies, natural magic and dark violence - and his early exploration of a nascent aesthetic of the sublime. Salvator Rosa shows how the artist, in a series of remarkable works, responded to new movements in thought and feeling, creating images that spoke to the deepest concerns of his age. 'Helen Langdon takes on the intriguing figure of Salvator Rosa in this definitive account of the multi-talented - but still elusive - artist (painter and etcher), writer and actor. She is very much at home in the complex world of artistic debate in seventeenth-century Rome and deeply sympathetic to this difficult and ultimately disappointed 'genius', as he described himself, who aspired to be a philosopher-painter and satirist.' - Christopher Brown, former director of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford 'Helen Langdon's engrossing presentation of the eccentric, conceited, and phenomenally talented Salvator Rosa restores one of Baroque Italy's most illustrious artists to his rightful place among the seventeenth century's absolute protagonists. Rosa's phantasmagoric landscapes, home to strange animals, Etruscan priests, and weird witches, were once a must for every ambitious collector, but his most towering work of art, as Langdon suggests, may have been his own remarkable life.' - Ingrid Rowland, Professor, University of Notre Dame Rome Global Gateway 'In his passionate defence of the creative autonomy of the artist, Salvator Rosa strikes us as astoundingly modern. Helen Langdon's superb biography, born of more than half a century of reflection on Rosa, presents the artist in all his brilliance and wit, his vaulting ambition, his potent originality as a painter and his infuriating complexity as a person.' - Gabriele Finaldi, Director of the National Gallery, London

Author Biography

Helen Langdon is an art historian with a special interest in the Italian Baroque. She is author of Claude Lorrain (1989) and Caravaggio: A Life (1999) and is based in London.

Reviews

"In his passionate defense of the creative autonomy of the artist, Salvator Rosa strikes us as astoundingly modern. Langdon's superb biography, born of more than half a century of reflection on Rosa, presents the artist in all his brilliance and wit, his vaulting ambition, his potent originality as a painter, and his infuriating complexity as a person."--Gabriele Finaldi, director, National Gallery, London "Langdon takes on the intriguing figure of Salvator Rosa in this definitive account of the multitalented--but still elusive--artist (painter and etcher), writer, and actor. She is very much at home in the complex world of artistic debate in seventeenth-century Rome and deeply sympathetic to this difficult and ultimately disappointed 'genius, ' as he described himself, who aspired to be a philosopher-painter and satirist."--Christopher Brown, former director of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford "Langdon's engrossing presentation of the eccentric, conceited, and phenomenally talented Salvator Rosa restores one of Baroque Italy's most illustrious artists to his rightful place among the seventeenth century's absolute protagonists. Rosa's phantasmagoric landscapes, home to strange animals, Etruscan priests, and weird witches, were once a must for every ambitious collector, but his most towering work of art, as Langdon suggests, may have been his own remarkable life."--Ingrid Rowland, professor, University of Notre Dame Rome Global Gateway