
Renaissance Cities
The extraordinary cultural production of Italy from the late-fourteenth to the end of the sixteenth century—what we call the Renaissance—exerted a defining influence on Western modernity. The richness of the literature, art, and politics of this period fascinate us still today. This exhibit examines a wide range of innovative modes of expression in three Italian cities. They narrate the creative intersections and tensions between historiography, politics, and ideology in Florence; the invention of printing and changing practices of reading and writing in Venice; and architectural re-imaginings of classical antiquity in Christian Rome.
The exhibit was curated by Nancy Canepa’s “Humanism and Renaissance” class (Italian 22): Tony DiPadova ’19, Camila R Feltrin ’20, Daniela Jerez ’18, Madeline Killen ’18, Nicolle Salazar ’19, and Evan Strouss GR. It will be on display in the Class of 1965 Galleries from November 15th, 2017, through February 23rd, 2018.
You may download a small, 8x10 version of the poster.