Isabella and Leonardo

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The Artistic Relationship between Isabella d’Este and Leonardo da Vinci, 1500-1506

Francis Ames-Lewis

View Inside Format: Cloth
Price: $55.00
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Isabella d'Este, the marchioness of Mantua, was a collector of antiquities, a patron of art, and one of the most vivid personalities of the Italian Renaissance. Her artistic relationship with Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) is charted through the letters that they exchanged over the course of about six years. Beginning in late 1499, Leonardo spent several months in Mantua, where he met Isabella and produced a finished portrait drawing of her. In the years that followed, the marchioness wrote to the artist to ask him to undertake other paintings and projects. Though little came of these requests, da Vinci did produce a drawing of some classical hard-stone vases to assist her search for collectible antiques and also started work on a painting of Christ as a twelve-year-old boy at her request.

The story of their relationship is explored in depth for the first time in Isabella and Leonardo. This illuminating story raises interesting and important questions about relationships between artists and patrons, and about women as art patrons at the beginning of the 16th century.

Francis Ames-Lewis is emeritus professor of the history of Renaissance art at Birkbeck, University of London.

"Drawing on Isabella's correspondence, the art historian Francis Ames-Lewis, has explored these might-have-beens in Isabella and Leonardo. It is a beautifully illustrated study of her patronage and collecting, which throws fascinating light on artist-patron relations at the time." Edmund Fawcett, RA Magazine

"This book gives us a clear understanding of the rich mutual benefit to Isabella and Leonardo of their relatively brief acquaintance. Through this relationship the author illuminates the artistic process and its inspiration."—Sarah D. P. Cockram, Renaissance Quarterly
ISBN: 9780300121247
Publication Date: June 26, 2012
300 pages, 6 1/4 x 9 1/4
60 color + 60 b/w illus.