Front cover image for Inventions of the studio, Renaissance to Romanticism

Inventions of the studio, Renaissance to Romanticism

"Between the time of Durer and that of Delacroix, the place where the artist worked transformed into what nineteenth-century writers would call the "studio." The transformation implied a new kind of exchange between the workplaces of the artisan and the intellectual: the crafting of images provided a model for new kinds of reflection, and the imagined site of artisanship a new setting for meditation. Eventually the studio, as a subject of painting, would be one through which artists would make their most ambitious statements about the nature of their vocations."

Print Book, English, 2005
University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, 2005