On the Beauty of Women
On the Beauty of Women
Agnolo Firenzuola
KONRAD EISENBICHLER
JACQUELINE MURRAY
Copyright Date: 1992
Published by: University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages: 136
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt3fhsm3
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Book Info
On the Beauty of Women
Book Description:

First published in 1548,On the Beauty of Womenpurports to record two conversations shared by a young gentleman, Celso, and four ladies of the upper bourgeoisie in the vicinity of Florence. One afternoon Celso and the ladies consider universal beauty. On a subsequent evening, they attempt to fashion a composite picture of perfect beauty by combining the beautiful features of women they know. The standards of beauty established in the garden give way to the artistic, creative imagination of the human spirit, and the group's movement from garden to hall seems to echo the dialogue's movement from Nature to Art, from divinely to humanly created beauty.Konrad Eisenbichler and Jacqueline Murray have provided the first translation into English of Firenzuola's dialogue since the nineteenth century. In their introduction, they argue that Firenzuola's work presents a useful point of entry into the society and values of the mid-sixteenth century. In its discussion of beauty, the dialogue reveals the intersection of Neoplantonic philosophy and mathematically based artistic theory, both inherited from classical antiquity. Indeed, Firenzuola's treatise has been assessed as one of the most significant expositions of Renaissance aesthetics.

eISBN: 978-0-8122-0057-7
Subjects: History
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-vi)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. vii-viii)
  3. List of Illustrations
    List of Illustrations (pp. ix-x)
  4. Acknowledgments
    Acknowledgments (pp. xi-xii)
    K.E. and J.M.
  5. Introduction
    Introduction (pp. xiii-xlii)

    Agnolo Firenzuola was born in Florence on 28 September 1493. His father Bastiano, following in the family tradition, worked as a notary. His mother Lucrezia was the daughter of Alessandro Braccesi, a mid-rank humanist employed as secretary of the Florentine republic and ambassador to Siena. Bastiano Firenzuola’s quiet career allowed him to raise his large family without experiencing serious repercussions from the political turmoil of Florentine politics. Although Alessandro Braccesi, who had been closely affiliated with the Savonarolan party, suffered a permanent political setback when Savonarola was ousted and executed, Bastiano Firenzuola displayed a keen sense of bourgeois adaptability and...

  6. Bibliography
    Bibliography (pp. xliii-xlviii)
  7. On the Beauty of Women
    • Proem
      Proem (pp. 3-8)

      Having often been asked by those people who have, at all times, the right to command me, that I publish a little dialogue dealing with the perfect beauty of a woman, a work which I composed some time ago at the request of one most dear to me, I believe I can, without too much difficulty, be excused for having been too hesitant or slow in pleasing them. A good number of those people who have asked me know very well how blameworthy and even detrimental it is not to lock up our young and tender little girls in the...

    • First Dialogue
      First Dialogue (pp. 9-43)

      Celso Selvaggio is a very good friend of mine. I can count on him so much, I often say he is another me. So, if I now publish these dialogues of his, which he once forbade me to do, he will be patient with me, because the love he bears for me forces him to do as I like and, what is more, because I am compelled to do this by someone who can compel him as well. He is also a very learned man, with good judgment, quite easygoing, and very eager to satisfy his friends’ wishes. For all...

    • Second Dialogue
      Second Dialogue (pp. 44-68)

      Because the young ladies who had been on the hilltop during the past discussion were left with a strong desire to see the form of that beautiful woman Celso had promised to paint for them, they begged Mona Lampiada to decree a place where, on another day, their wish could be fulfilled. And so Mona Lampiada, who had listened to Celso’s words no less willingly than they, or at least had appeared to do so, had her husband, who was himself a bright man, invite Celso and these ladies to the next party at their house, together with other relatives...

    • Notes to the Proem
      Notes to the Proem (pp. 69-71)
    • Notes to the First Dialogue
      Notes to the First Dialogue (pp. 71-79)
    • Notes to the Second Dialogue
      Notes to the Second Dialogue (pp. 79-84)
  8. Index
    Index (pp. 85-87)
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