♫musicjinni

Sacred Naturalism and the Art of Moretto and Savoldo

video thumbnail
Professor Stephen Campbell delivers the third lecture in the Louise Smith Bross Lecture Series entitled "Sacred Naturalism and the Art of Moretto and Savoldo" on May 10, 2012, at the Cochrane-Woods Art Center. In his four-part series entitled "Inventions of Place: Rethinking Peripheral Identities in the Age of Lotto and Titian," Professor Campbell resets assumptions about the Italian Renaissance as he examines peripheral personalities in the age of Titian. Stephen Campbell is Professor and Chair of the Department of Art History at Johns Hopkins University.

Sponsored by the Art History Department at the University of Chicago, the Louise Smith Bross Lecture Series is held triennially and features presentations by internationally renowned scholars on any aspect of pre-1800 European art and architecture. The Louise Smith Bross Memorial Fund, endowed in memory of Louise Smith Bross, PhD '94, also supports the publication of the lectures by the University of Chicago Press.

➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/UCHICAGOytSubscribe

About #UChicago:
Since its founding in 1890, the University of Chicago has been a destination for rigorous inquiry and field-defining research. This transformative academic experience empowers students and scholars to challenge conventional thinking in pursuit of original ideas.

#UChicago on the Web:
Home: http://bit.ly/UCHICAGO-homepage
News: http://bit.ly/UCHICAGO-news
Facebook: http://bit.ly/UCHICAGO-FB
Twitter: http://bit.ly/UCHICAGO-TW
Instagram: http://bit.ly/UCHICAGO-IG

University of Chicago on YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/uchicago ***

ACCESSIBILITY: If you experience any technical difficulties with this video or would like to make an accessibility-related request, please email digicomm@uchicago.edu.

Re-Mapping the Italian Renaissance

Against Titian

Sacred Naturalism and the Art of Moretto and Savoldo

Distant Cities: Lorenzo Lotto, Gaudenzio Ferrari, and the Making of Sacred Landscape

A Conversation with Ada Palmer on the Nature of Intellectual Transformation

Disclaimer DMCA