Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects
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The Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects is a famous book by an Italian artist named Giorgio Vasari from the 1500s. This book shares stories about many great painters, sculptors, and architects from the past. It is very important because it is one of the first and most popular books about art history.
Vasari first published his book in 1550 and then updated it in 1568. In the newer version, he added more stories about artists from Venice, but some people thought he talked too much about artists from his own city, Florence. His book helped people learn about the lives and works of many famous artists and changed how we think about art.
Today, The Lives is still well-known and is considered one of the most important books about art from the Italian Renaissance. It was the first big book ever written about art history, making Vasari a key person in sharing the stories of great artists.
Background
Paolo Giovio wanted to write about artists but asked Giorgio Vasari for help instead. Vasari wrote The Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects. This was the first big book about art history. It came out in Florence in 1550 and was updated in 1568.
Vasari liked to talk about artists from his home city, Florence. He did not talk as much about artists from other places like Venice. Even though he visited Venice for the second edition, he still focused more on Florence. His book has fun stories about artists, but some details might not be completely true. Even with some mistakes, the book is very important for learning about art during the Renaissance in Italy.
Influence
Vasari's Vite is an important book about artists from the Renaissance. It has influenced many writers about art. The book has been translated into many languages, including Dutch, English, French, German, Polish, Russian, and Spanish.
The Vite helped shape ideas about the Renaissance, especially about Florence and Rome. It is a key source of information about early Renaissance artists from Italy, even though it mostly talks about artists from Florence and Rome and less about artists from other parts of Italy and Europe.
Contents of the 1568 edition
The Vite tells stories about many important Italian artists. It helps people learn their names, which can sometimes be spelled differently. Below is the full list of artists from the second edition published in 1568. In a few cases, short biographies are grouped together in one section.
Volumes and parts
The 1568 edition was published in three volumes. Vasari split the biographies into three parts. Parts I and II are in the first volume. Part III is in the last two volumes.
Vol. 1 (= parts I and II)
Vol. 1 (= parts I and II),
title page variant
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Vol. 2 (first volume of part III)
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.pdf?page=5)
Vol. 3 (second volume of part III)
Volume 1
The first volume begins with a new message to Cosimo I de' Medici and another to Pope Pius V. It includes a list of names and objects mentioned, and a list of places and buildings with references to where they appear in the book. These lists help readers use the book easily and are still used as examples in art history books today. After these lists, there is a long letter by Florentine historian Giovanni Battista Adriani to Vasari about the history of art. The main part of the volume starts with a preface, followed by an introduction about the background, materials, and techniques of architecture, sculpture, and painting. Another preface comes next, introducing the actual "Vite".
Biographies, first part
Biographies, second part
Volume 2
Biographies, third part
Volume 3
Biographies, third part (continued)
Editions
There have been many editions and translations of the Lives over the years. The first English translation was done by Eliza Foster in 1850-51. This helped many English readers learn about the book for the first time. It stayed popular throughout the 1800s. The most recent English translation was made by Peter and Julia Conaway Bondanella in 1991. Today, there is a detailed Italian version edited by Rosanna Bettarini and Paola Barocchi.
Unabridged Annotated English Translations
There are several complete English translations of this famous book. Eliza Foster, writing as "Mrs. Jonathan Foster," published one version through Henry George Bohn between 1850 and 1851. It had six volumes. Later, Louisa S. Maclehose worked with Gerard Baldwin Brown on a part called "On Technique," published by J. M. Dent & Company in 1907. Gaston du C. De Vere also did a ten-volume translation, released by Macmillan & Company and the Medici Society from 1912 to 1914.
Versions online
Italian
- 1550 edition Progetto Manuzio (PDF)
- 1550 edition Selections drawn from a 1768 reprint
- 1568 edition, Vol. 1 (biographies from Cimabue to Signorelli)
- 1568 edition, Vol. 2
- 1568 edition, Vol. 3
English
- [Giorgio Vasari's Lives of the Artists]( Website created by Adrienne DeAngelis. Currently incomplete, intended to be unabridged
- [Stories of the Italian Artists from Vasari]( Translated by E. L. Seeley, 1908, abridged
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