ISBN: 9780674600270
A HISTORY OF SPANISH PAINTING. Volume XI. The Valencian School in the Early Renaissance.
ISBN: 9780674600270
A HISTORY OF SPANISH PAINTING. Volume XI. The Valencian School in the Early Renaissance.
Continuing a work which has already taken its proper place as a masterpiece of American scholarship. Professor Chandler Rathfon Post chronicles the developments during the early Renaissance in Andalusia. Two of the leading artists of the period, Fernando Yáñez de la Almedina and Fernando de Llanos, were principal Spanish exponents of the influence of Leonardo da Vinci. Such other outstanding figures as Paolo da San Leocadio, Juan de Juanes, Martín Gómez are discussed in this first comprehensive and ordered analysis of the Valencian School during the early Cinquecento.
All who are seriously interested in Spanish art rely on this classic series in art history.
Chandler Rathfon Post (1881-1959)
Historian of Spanish and Italian renaissance art; early art history professor at Harvard. Post was born to William R. Post and Anne M. Rathfon (Post). He graduated from the University [grammar] School in Detroit and then attended Harvard University, graduating with a B.A. in Spanish literature in 1904. His classmates included Franklin Roosevelt and Hispanic scholar Hayward Keniston (1883-1970). He spent the academic year 1904-5 at the American School in Athens working on his master's thesis on Greek literature. His Harvard master's thesis was granted in 1906. Post then began teaching as an instructor of English, French, Italian and Greek and fine arts at his alma mater, and working on his doctorate. His dissertation in Romance literature, written under Jeremiah D. M. Ford (1873-1958), was completed in 1909 on the topic of Dante's influence on Castilian allegory. That same year, Post suggested Harvard's first specialized course on Italian art to Department Head, Arthur Pope. During those years, Post made the friendship of Boston collector Isabella Stewart Gardner (1840-1924). Though his first published article (1909) was in art history, his article publications of these years focused on literature, the most notable of which, "The Dramatic Art of Sophocles" appeared in 1912. The same year he was named professor of Greek and Fine Arts. In World War I, Post served as assistant to the military attaché at the United States Embassy in Rome 1917-1919. The Italian government made him Chevalier of the Order of St. Maurice and St. Lazarus in 1918. Returning to academic life after the war, Post continued to alternate his Harvard courses between the Departments of Classics and Fine Arts. His Fine Arts course 9A "Art and Culture of Italy in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance" was a pioneering synthesis of art, religion and history. He was appointed associate professor in 1920. In 1921, Post published his History of European and American Sculpture, one of the early surveys of the medium in America. In 1923 he was promoted to full professor. Post co-wrote with George H. Chase A History of Sculpture in 1924, but was already at that time working on his magnum opus, The History of Spanish Painting (12 vols.), which appeared beginning in 1930. Post spent much of the 1930's hunting for obscure paintings in Spain to complete his corpus. He was made William Dorr Boardman professor of Fine Arts in 1934, holding the position as emeritus after 1950 when he retired. In 1953 he received an honorary doctorate from the University of Michigan. He was at work on the final volumes of his History of Spanish Painting at the time of his death. The History was completed by a former student Harold Wethey. His students, in addition to Wethey, included Benjamin Rowland, Jr., Martin Soria, and Walter W. S. Cook. Together with A. Kingsley Porter, Walter Muir Whitehill and Georgiana Goddard King, Cook, Post constituted an early "New England School" of American interest in Spanish Romaneque studies. The Romanesque scholar Walter S. Cahn termed Post's History of Spanish Painting "now scarcely readable." As a lecturer, one student, Otto Wittmann recalled him lecturing completely from memory, seldom writing information down. "His tests were all factual tests . . . that's all he cared about."
Volume I Introduction. The Romanesque Style
Volume II The Franco-Gothic Style. The Italo-Gothic and International Styles
Volume III The Italo-Gothic and International Styles (Continued)
Volume IV–Part 1 The Hispano-Flemish Style in North-Western Spain
Volume IV–Part 2 The Hispano-Flemish Style in North-Western Spain
Volume V The Hispano-Flemish Style in Andalusia
Volume VI–Part 1 The Valencian School in the Late Middle Ages and Early Renaissance
Volume VI–Part 2 The Valencian School in the Late Middle Ages and Early Renaissance
Volume VIII-Part 1 The Aragonese School in the Late Middle Ages
Volume IX–Part 1 The Beginning of the Renaissance in Castile and Leon
Volume IX–Part 2 The Beginning of the Renaissance in Castile and Leon
Volume X The Early Renaissance in Andalusia
Volume XI The Valencian School in the Early Renaissance
Volume XII–Part 1 The Catalan School in the Early Renaissance
Volume XII–Part 2 The Catalan School in the Early Renaissance
Volume XIII The Schools of Aragon and Navarre in the Early Renaissance
Volume XIV The Later Renaissance in Castile