Rivista di Estetica (Aug 2015)

Ludovico Dolce e la nascita della critica d’arte

  • Marco Sgarbi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4000/estetica.350
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 59
pp. 163 – 182

Abstract

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The paper shows how the re-discovery of Aristotle’s Poetics in the sixteenth century led to the rise of art criticism, contrary to the long-standing idea that criticism was born in the Enlightenment. The focus of the article is on the polymath Ludovico Dolce, who, in his Dialogo sulla Pittura (1557), employs the precepts of the Aristotelian poetics to assess firm criteria of judgment of artworks. Unlike many other writings of the period on the same subject, Dolce’s reflections did not offer neither a history of art nor a body of rules on how to paint or sculpt, rather sought the proper ways to interpret accurately the artistic work in all its aspects, even the most subjective. Through stringent parallels with Aristotle’s Poetics, Dolce outlines what can be considered one of the earliest form of art criticism.

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