The catalogue of the Venice and Washington exhibition (1990-91).
Catalog of a joint exhibition sponsored by the Palazzo ducale, Venice, 2 June-7 Oct. 1990 and the National Gallery of Art, Washington, 28 Oct. 1990-27 Jan. 1991.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 417-32)
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
This excellent catalog of the 1990-1991 exhibition in Venice and Washington is a work of permanent value. Featuring essays by 16 authorities, primarily Italian and American, on every aspect of the art of Titian (Tiziano Vecelli, c. 1490-1576), the quintessential Venetian artist of the high Renaissance, the work transcends the limits of spatial and temporal exhibition to summarize and extend current scholarship. At the same time, the text is accessible, well translated, and aimed at a broad audience. Many of the works in the exhibit were conserved or cleaned, so the book features fresh illustrations and a hefty amount of technical discussion of specialist interest. A distinguished addition to the vast bibliography, recommended for all art collections.-- Jack Perry Brown, Ryer son & Burnham Libs., Art Inst. of Chicago (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
CHOICE Review
Although Titian's contemporaries thought that the aged painter was a centenarian at his death in 1576, modern scholarship has placed Titian's birthdate at c. 1488-1490. In view of this revision, an anniversary exhibition devoted to the full range of Titian's oeuvre was held in Venice during the summer of 1990 (the exhibit then traveled to Washington, DC, in slightly altered form). The book under review is the catalog of this major show, and is perhaps the most generally informative and accessible publication among the numerous new studies on Titian from the past few years. The catalog includes a dozen short essays by major Titian scholars covering various aspects of the master's life and milieu, and full, if brief, entries for the more than 75 paintings, drawings, and prints in the Venice show. There is some variation in quality and usefulness in the introductory essays, and the more intractable problems in recent Titian scholarship remain unresolved (Giorgione/Titian attributions, the "nonfinito" of the late works). Further, the scope of the catalog, mostly limited to those works exhibited, cannot be considered definitive. Nevertheless, the overall high quality of its production--from the succulent illustrations to the excellent bibliograpy--makes this book a most desirable acquisition for all libraries. -J. I. Miller, California State University, Long Beach