The Implicating Gaze in Bronzino’s Cosimo I de’ Medici as Orpheus and the Intellectual Culture of the Accademia Fiorentina

Q2 Arts and Humanities Studies in Iconography Pub Date : 2021-01-01 DOI:10.32773/qgcr7110
Christine Zappella
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Abstract

The iconography of Bronzino’s sexually explicit Portrait of Cosimo I de’ Medici as Orpheus has long challenged scholars, especially since scientific analysis revealed below the portrait’s surface a fully conceived underpainting depicting a different moment from the story of Orpheus. First, I suggest that this change was associated with Cosimo’s military victory at the battle of Montemurlo, where the duke’s army finally extirpated his political opposition. Second, I contend that Cosimo’s nudity should be interpreted within the milieu of the Accademia Fiorentina, where the painting’s eroticism suggested to court literati that the duke had achieved the highest state of Platonic spirituality, known as “erotic furor.” Finally, I argue that although Bronzino’s Cosimo as Orpheus seemingly aggrandizes the duke, it is a polysemous image that former Republican, anti-ducal literati could likewise interpret as a scathing critique of the young ruler and an embodiment of the hope that political demise was close at hand.
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Bronzino的《Cosimo I de ' Medici》中暗含的凝视与佛罗伦萨学院的知识文化
布朗奇诺的《柯西莫·德·美第奇作为俄耳甫斯的露骨性爱肖像》的肖像学长期以来一直挑战着学者们,尤其是在科学分析揭示了在肖像的表面下,一个完全构思好的底画描绘了与俄耳甫斯故事不同的时刻之后。首先,我认为这种变化与科西莫在蒙特穆洛战役中的军事胜利有关,公爵的军队最终消灭了他的政治反对派。其次,我认为科西莫的裸体应该在佛罗伦萨学院的背景下解释,在那里,这幅画的情色向宫廷文人暗示,公爵已经达到了柏拉图精神的最高境界,被称为“情色狂热”。最后,我认为尽管Bronzino笔下的Cosimo作为Orpheus似乎夸大了公爵的形象,但这是一个多义的形象,前共和党人,反公爵的文人同样可以将其解释为对年轻统治者的严厉批评,以及政治灭亡即将到来的希望的体现。
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来源期刊
Studies in Iconography
Studies in Iconography Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1
期刊介绍: Studies in Iconography is an annual that contains original essays that study the visual culture of the period before 1600. Each volume includes an overview of scholarship on a topic of current interest, approached from an interdisciplinary and/or theoretical perspective; five to seven articles that often highlight interdisciplinary concerns; and six to ten in-depth reviews of important recent scholarly books, facsimiles, and catalogues. The editors expecially encourage essays that explore newer approaches developed in areas such as semiotics, cultural anthropology, gender studies, ideological critique, and social history as well as those that incorporate the perspectives of the new art history, the new historicism, and other histories of representation.
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