Ut Pictura Poesis - Lee, Rensselaer W. Ut Pictura Poesis, The Humanistic Theory of Painting. New York: W. W. Norton & Co., Inc. 1967
Written some twenty-five years ago, this study, in a sense interdisciplinary, seems to have served the purposes both of art and literary historians, and even, at times, of musicologists. It has been, I am told, useful not only to mature scholars, but to graduate students and undergraduates as well. I hope, then, that its release in book form from its rather stately and inaccessible prison in the Art Bulletin will bring some satisfaction both to the teachers who have been good [p. vii] enough to assign it to their students and to the students who have often found it hard to lay their hands on. The opportunity has been taken to make certain corrections in the text, to improve some illustrations where better copy has come to hand, and to add an index.
If I were writing the essay today, its essential argument and conclusions would stand very much as they are. However, I would mitigate the overemphasis of certain judgments. I would not, for instance, condemn out of hand Charles Le Brun's allegorical histories with a clever phrase borrowed from Tennyson, nor would I call Annibale Carraci's Rinaldo and Armida in Naples, though it is no masterpiece, an intolerable picture. More important, since the appearance of the essay in 1940, several scholars have published works that valuably supplement or correct what I have written. First among these is Denis Mahon's Studies in Seicento Art and Theory [London, 1947], with its important discovery of a fragment of an early seventeenth-century treatise on painting by Giovanni Battista Agucchi that anticipates the theory of Bellori by half a century. In an article entitled "Antique Frameworks for Renaissance Art Theory: Alberti and Pino," in Marsyas, Vol. III [1946], Creighton Gilbert demonstrated that it was the Venetian painter and writer Paolo Pino, not Ludovico Dolce as I had said, who first clearly divided the labor of the painter into the three categories of disegno, inventione, and colorire, which correspond to the three major divisions of the art of rhetoric among the ancients. In his brilliant book Galileo as a Critic of the Arts [The Hague, 1954], Erwin Panofsky's discussion of the great astronomer's contribution to the paragone literature is one that I should have liked to have at hand when I discussed Leonardo's paragone. For a number of the sixteenth century treatises I discuss I refer the reader to the critical introductions, bibliography and notes in Paola Barocchi's Trattati d'arte del cinquecento fra manierismo e controriforma, Vols. 1 and 2 [Bari, 1960-62]. Mark Roskill's new edition of Ludovico Dolce's Dialogo della pittura, which will shortly be published in the monograph series of the College Art Association of America and the Archaeological Institute of America, also contains valuable matter for the study of the humanistic theory of painting during the sixteenth century.
Rensselaer W. Lee
[pp. vii-viii]
[Lee, Rensselaer W. Ut Pictura Poesis, The Humanistic Theory of Painting. New York: W. W. Norton & Co., Inc. 1967.]
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