- Docente: Fabrizio Lollini
- Credits: 9
- SSD: L-ART/01
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Bologna
-
Corso:
First cycle degree programme (L) in
Foreign Languages and Literature (cod. 0979)
Also valid for First cycle degree programme (L) in Drama, Art and Music Studies (cod. 0956)
First cycle degree programme (L) in History (cod. 0962)
First cycle degree programme (L) in Humanities (cod. 8850)
Learning outcomes
Classes will try to offer a general approach to history of medieval
art from 5th to 15th century. Students are hoped to acquire on one
side the abilities which are necessary for the knowledge of the
artistic production of the period - attribution, and skill in the
"reading" of the work - and on the other a conscious methodology.
The last lessons will offer a more specific topic, as a research
example.
Course contents
The course can be taken by the students of the different curricula
of the 'laurea triennale'. The lessons will take place in the first
semester, and will be divided in two parts (60 hours). The first
section (A) will examine general problems connected with the
subject, so to offer a help to organize better the personal study.
It will based on two different topics. On one side we will face
some methodological problems: the chronological definition of
"Middle Age"; the difference between historical geography and
art-historical geography; the materials; the relationships with
Antiquity; the workshops of Medieval artists; and so on. On the
other side we will consider the most important aspects of the
artistic stream in Middle Age, from a more chronological point of
view. The second section (B) will offer a more specific example of
research; the title for this academic year will be "Perception and feature of the religious issue in Medieval Art".
I - Students must know the basic facts of art history in Italy from
Late Antiquity to the first two decades of XV century, include
Renaissance's first generation. The text book(s) can be chosen by
the student from the handbooks ("manuali") in use in Italy,
covering the period above mentioned; there is not one specific
compulsory text.
II - Students are expected to read one of the following texts (or
group of texts), here quoted in the italian editions: a – three
studies from the volumes Arte e storia nel Medioevo, Torino 2002-05
b – J.J.G. Alexander, I miniatori medioevali e il loro metodo di
lavoro, Modena 2004 c – M. Baxandall, Pittura ed esperienze sociali
nell'Italia del Quattrocento, ed. it. Torino 1978 and later ed. d –
M. Baxandall, Giotto e gli umanisti, ed. it. Milano 1994 e – M.
Baxandall, Forme dell'intenzione, ed. it. Torino 2000 f – E.
Castelnuovo (curator), Artifex bonus. Il mondo dell'artista
medioevale, Bari 2004 g – H. Focillon, Vita delle forme, ed. it.
Torino 1990 and previous ed. h – C. Ginzburg, Indagini su Piero,
ed. Torino 1994 (only THIS edition) i – E. Panofsky, La prospettiva
come “forma simbolica” e altri scritti, ed. it. Milano 1961 and
later ed. l – E. Panofsky, Rinascimento e rinascenze nell'arte
occidentale, ed. it. Milano 1971 and later ed. m – O. Pächt, La
miniatura medioevale, ed. it. Torino 1987 n - S. Romano, La O di
Giotto, Milano 2008 o – J. Von Schlosser-Magnino, L'arte del
Medioevo, ed. it. Torino 1989 p - C. Tosco, L'architettura medievale in Italia, Bologna 2016 q – A. Warburg, La rinascita del paganesimo antico, ed. it. Firenze 1966 e succ. edd. q – R. Wittkower, La scultura, ed. it. Torino 198. Some other texts could be introduced in this list immediately before, or during, classes.
III - Students must study the topic of the second
section (B), above mentioned, whose bibliography will be published
on this page ("testi")
IV - Students are also invited to know directly - that is, not
through books or the net but FROM LIFE - at least one Medieval
artwork: a church, a palace, a painting, a sculpture.
For more detailed infos about the lessons and the texts, and for
all the problems connected with the different "value" of the course
(12, 10, 6 or 5 credits) or with the system of assessment methods,
you can contact the teacher by mail or in office hours. Erasmus and
Overseas students have a reduced bibliography in section III ; section
I is anyway to be studied (even if the exam can be oral instead of
written, if you prefer), so is the IV; one of the sections II and
III can be substituted with a personal research, to be discussed
during the exam (or, if you prefer, written and presented as a
paper).
For 5 or 6 credits the program is the same you find for Italian
students.
Readings/Bibliography
Texts/Bibliography: see in "course contents" for sections I, II and
IV.
For section III:
1 - Le forme del sacro e le abitudini visive del pubblico
personal notes from lesson, together with M. Baxandall, Pittura ed esperienze sociali nell'Italia del Quattrocento, Torino, varie edd. [this is ALTERNATIVE to the choice of Baxandall's text as section II of the general program]
2- Lo spazio sacro, gli investimenti per l'aldilà e le pratiche devozionali
personal notes from lesson, together with ONE of the following texts: M. Bacci, "Pro remedio animae". Immagini scre e pratiche devozionali in Italia centrale (secoli XIII e XIV), Pisa 2000; M. Bacci, Investimenti per l'aldilà, Bari 2003; M. Bacci, Lo spazio dell'anima, Bari 2005
3 - Lo spazio del sacro: il complesso stefaniano e le pratiche processionali basso medievali a Bologna
personal notes from lesson, together with M. Fanti, Sulla simbologia gerosolimitana del complesso di Santo Stefano di Bologna, in “Il Carrobbio”, 10, 1984, pp. 121-133*, and P. Cova, Una testimonianza della tarda attività della bottega di Giovanni da Modena: "l'Andata al Calvario" e "la Crocifissione" nel complesso di Santo Stefano, in Giovanni da Modena, catalogo della mostra a cura di D. Benati e M. Medica, Milano 2014, pp. 110-132**
4 - La miniatura per gli ordini religiosi a Bologna. Francescani e Domenicani
personal notes from lesson, together with 15 entries from the catalogue of the exhibition Forme e colori del Medioevo a Bologna, a cura di M. Medica, Venezia 2000
5 - Il caso di Sant'Antonio di Padova a Bologna
personal notes from lesson, together with F. Lollini, “Con le fondamenta nel Medioevo: Sant’Antonio di Padova a Bologna”, Opus Incertum, 6-7, 2011, pp. 42-51*, and F. Lollini, "Sulla decorazione pittorica di Sant'Antonio di Padova a Bologna. Giuseppe Rivani, Antonio Maria Nardi e Igino Benvenuto Supino", Il Carrobbio, vol. XXXVII, 2011, pp. 155-170*
Texts marked * are present and downloadable from Unibo's website AMS Campus, the one marked ** can be obtained through the link https://www.academia.edu/17473909/Una_testimonianza_della_tarda_attivit%C3%A0_della_bottega_di_Giovanni_da_Modena_lAndata_al_Calvario_e_la_Crocifissione_nel_complesso_di_Santo_Stefano of the website Academia.edu.
Students who have attended classes will prepare ONE of the abovementioned topics, those who have not TWO.
Teaching methods
Frontal lessons. For the general section (I), some workshops will
be also scheduled.
Assessment methods
Written test for (I), oral exam for (II), (III) and (IV) - see here
"course contents". Students coming from other countries, and/or not
of Italian mother-tongue (Erasmus, Overseas, and other exchanges)
CAN (not MUST), have an oral exam for all the sections.
The written test is a 10 image exam: you will be asked to precise
as more as you can the stylistic situation (including date and
area) of every image; 18+ will be admitted to the oral section of
the exam; for other info, please ask. The oral section will cover
the part II, III and IV of the program, and will be based on the
readings and on the topics we will consider in classes.
Teaching tools
Slide projection or ppt during lessons.
Links to further information
Office hours
See the website of Fabrizio Lollini