Studiolo
Giorgio Agamben author Alberto Toscano translator
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Seagull Books London Ltd
Published:23rd Apr '24
Should be back in stock very soon
A brief study of select Western art from Italy’s foremost philosopher.
In Renaissance palaces, the studiolo was a small room to which the prince withdrew to meditate or read, surrounded by paintings he particularly loved. This book is a kind of studiolo for its author, Giorgio Agamben, as he turns his philosophical lens on the world of Western art.
Studiolo is a fascinating take on a selection of artworks created over millennia; some are easily identifiable, others rarer. Though they were produced over an arc of time stretching from 5000 BCE to the present, only now have they achieved their true legibility. Agamben contends that we must understand that the images bequeathed by the past are really addressed to us, here and now; otherwise, our historical awareness is broken. Notwithstanding the attention to detail and the critical precautions that characterize the author’s method—they provoke us with a force, even a violence, that we cannot escape. When we understand why Dostoevsky feared losing his faith before Holbein’s Body of the Dead Christ, when Chardin’s Still Life with Hare is suddenly revealed to our gaze as a crucifixion or Twombly’s sculpture shows that beauty must ultimately fall, the artwork is torn from its museological context and restored to its almost prehistoric emergence. These artworks are beautifully reproduced in color throughout Agamben’s short but significant addition to his scholarly oeuvre in English translation.
"Agamden writes scholarly books mostly, but this one caught our eye for other reasons. The title comes from a Latin and Italian word that means studious and study — in other words, to devote time and attention to acquiring knowledge. . . . This is a philosopher’s book, and an opportunity for the reader/viewer to think/see alongside him." * Spirituality & Practice *
ISBN: 9781803093680
Dimensions: 197mm x 140mm x 10mm
Weight: 172g
130 pages