Summer school Rome, 17-29 July 2012



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Text Memory Monument The use of the past in Italian Renaissance culture Summer school Rome, 17-29 July 2012 July 17 Welcome, Introductory lectures & Methodology Place: Danish Academy in Rome 9.00-10.30 Marianne Pade, Studia humanitatis 10.45-12.15 Methodology I Gitte Lønstrup Dal Santo, Memory Studies Sources Texts: Yates and Cicero 12.15-14.00 Lunch will be provided. Price: 5. Places of Power I: the Capitol and the heritage of republican Rome Place: Danish Academy in Rome The Capitoline Hill, overlooking the Forum Romanum, was the political and religious centre of ancient Rome from times immemorial. In later periods, from the eleventh century and onwards, it once more became the centre of civic Rome, and the overwhelming symbolic value of this lieu de mémoire was exploited by politicians, writers and artists alike. The module will examine the complex interaction between the Capitoline Hill as geographical place, the practical and symbolic role attributed to it in Roman times, and the way Renaissance humanists, beginning with Petrarch, thinkers, artists, and architects used it to fashion themselves and contemporary Rome. 14.00-14.45 Carsten Lange, The significance of the Capitol and the Forum in Republican Rome 14.45-15.00 Break 15.00-16.30 Outi Merisalo, Ruins, inscriptions, pigs and cows: Poggio's description of the ruins of Rome Text: Poggio, De varietate fortunae book I (excerpts) 16.30- Visit to Villa Giulia (optional, open till 19.30) July 18 Places of Power I: the Capitol and the heritage of republican Rome (ctd.) Place: the Capitol (morning), the Danish Academy (afternoon) 8.30 Guided tour of the Capitol by Victor Tschudi Visit to the Capitoline Museums 1

NB: We meet at the Capitol Transportation: Bus no. 160 Places of Power II: the Vatican and the heritage of imperial Rome Place: the Danish Academy The Papal State was not only the spiritual centre of the Christian Catholic world during the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, it was also a major, and rather ruthless, political power. The papal court, the Curia, was one of the most splendid courts of Renaissance Italy, and the patronage of the popes was eagerly sought both by artists and men of learning. The module will outline the origins of the Vatican as a place of worship and political entity and examine its use of the heritage from imperial Rome in literature, art and architecture. 15.30-16.15 Gitte Lønstrup, The Constantine basilica and the monumentalization of Peter's grave 16.15-16.30 Break 16.30-18.00 Marianne Pade, The papal state Text: Lorenzo Valla, On the donation of Constantine July 19-20 Places of Power II: the Vatican and the heritage of imperial Rome (ctd.) Place: the Danish Academy (morning), St Peter s and the Vatican, S. Maria del Popolo (20 th morning) July 19 8.00-16 The Vatican 8.00-9.45: St. Peter s basilica. NB: We meet at St. Peter s basilica 10.30-ca. 15.00 (including breaks):the Vatican Museums Guided tour by Outi Merisalo and Marianne Pade Afternoon at free disposal (the Vatican Museums close at 18.00, St. Peter s closes at 19.00) July 20 9.30 Santa Maria del Popolo (Outi Merisalo, Marianne Pade) NB: We meet at the church 11.30-13.00 Methodology II Gitte Lønstrup, Cultural memory studies Methodology: sites of memory 13.00-14.00 Break 14.00-15.30 Methodology III Leonardo Cecchini, Memory and Intertextuality 2

15.30 Assignment workshop with: Leonardo Cecchini Carsten Lange Gitte Lønstrup Outi Merisalo July 21 7.30 9.45 Excursion to Florence, the centre of the early Renaissance movement Departure for Florence, Danish Academy Arrival in Florence, Piazza della libertà Visits to Santa Trinita and Cappella Sassetti Palazzo Rucellai Basilica of Santa Maria Novella Basilica of San Lorenzo Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana Basilica of Santa Croce and the Pazzi Chapel Guides: Leonardo Cecchini Peter Gillgren Outi Merisalo Marianne Pade 17.00 Departure from Florence (Ponte alle Grazie) Transportation: private bus (free of charge) July 22 No programme NB: Participants deciding to stay in Florence will have to arrange and pay their own transportation to Rome (train tickets available at app. 45). Accommodation too will be at their own expense. July 23-24 Places of study and leisure: palaces and villas, urban and rural lifestyle Place: Villa Lante (Finnish Institute in Rome) and the Danish Academy In fifteenth-century Italy both the architectural form and the concept of the palace and the villa change. Renaissance thinkers often discussed the relative merits of the vita activa, a life of participation in public affairs, and the vita contemplativa, the reclusive life of the religious or the philosopher. Theoreticians of architecture and education wrote treatises, with ample use of antique parallels, about the fitting architectural settings for each lifestyle and the correct manners to go with them; the urban palace, be it a cardinal s court or just any rich man s house, should be adapted to the busy, public life of the town, whereas the rural villa would be the ideal environment for philosophical discussions and bucolic pleasures. Lectures will introduce participants to some central Renaissance treatises on manners, to the neo-platonic dialogue, to bucolic literature and there will be presentations of and 3

visits to villas and palaces. July 23 Place: Villa Lante (Finnish Institute in Rome) 9.00-10.30 Outi Merisalo, Introduction to Villa Lante 10.45-12.15 Unn Irene Aasdalen, Neo-Platonism Text: Marsilio Ficino, De amore 12.15-14.00 Lunch 14.00-15.30 Trine Hass, Bucolic poetry Text, Petrarch, Bucolicum Carmen 15.45-17.15 Peter Gillgren, Villa architecture 18.00 Visit to the American Academy, lecture by director Christopher S. Celenza July 24 8.30- Palace tour with Peter Gillgren: Capitolium via Palazzo Massimo, Palazzo Farnese, through Via Giulia to Villa Farnesina. NB: We meet by the Capitol Place: Danish Academy 14.00-15.30 Leonardo Cecchini, Court culture Text: Baldassarre Castiglione, Il cortegiano 18.00- Presentations by Ph.D. students followed by summer school reception (provided) July 25-26 Images of man Place: Danish Academy In his still influential The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy (1860) the Swiss historian Jacob Burckhardt maintained that one of the characteristics of Renaissance culture was its focus on Man, as opposed to God, its cultivation of the individual. Though many of Burckhardt s ideas have long been proved mistaken, it is true that the individual became a focus point in art and literature. The module will discuss the development of the painted portrait and philosophical aspects of this celebration of Man as an individual being. July 25 9.00-10.30 Peter Gillgren, Renaissance Portraits 10.45-12.15 Unn Irene Aasdalen, Renaissance Neoplatonism Texts: Giovanni Pico della Mirandola, On the dignity of man Giovanni Pico della Mirandola, Heptaplus (excerpt) Burckhardt (excerpt) 12.15-14.00 Lunch will be provided. Price: 5. 14.00- Assignment workshop with: Unn Irene Aasdalen Leonardo Cecchini Trine Hass Peter Gillgren 4

Outi Merisalo Marianne Pade July 26 10.00-12.00 Images of words: books and monuments Visit to Biblioteca Corsiniana NB: we meet at the Corsiniana 9.30 14.00- Images of man (ctd.) Excursion with Peter Gillgren, renaissance portraits Place: San Pietro in Vincoli and the monument of Julius II July 26-28 Images of words: books and monuments (ctd.) Place: Danish Academy During the Renaissance graphic culture underwent two major transformations. The first had to do with the visual representation of words, the second with the way texts were multiplied. From the end of the fourteenth century humanist copyists consciously strove, on the basis of Carolingian models, to develop the kind of script which established and consolidated itself as the standard for classical and humanist texts, as opposed to the traditional gothic script still in use for liturgical and scholastic texts. During the fifteenth century we then see the gradual reappearance of a classicizing style in Latin epigraphy, mirrored also in display script in books. After the inventing of the printing press at the middle of the century humanist script gained new domains. The module will analyse the development of Florentine and Roman graphic culture in the fifteenth century, on parchment, stone and paper, and discuss the effects of the invention of the printing press. There will be visits to libraries and epigraphical monuments. July 27 9.00-10.30 Outi Merisalo, Introduction to Renaissance Scripts I: Florence 10.45-12.15 Marianne Pade, Introduction to Renaissance Scripts II: Rome 12.15-13.00 Lunch 13.00-15.00 Visit to Biblioteca Casanatense July 28 9.00-12.30 Visit to epigraphical monuments 12.30-14.00 Lunch 14.00-17.00 Summarizing workshops July 29 No programme List of teachers Unn Irene Aasdalen, Ph.D., University of Copenhagen Leonardo Cecchini, Prof., Dr., Aarhus University Christopher S. Celenza, Prof. Amercan Academy in Rome Karsten Friis-Jensen, Prof., dr.phil., University of Copenhagen Peter Gillgren, Prof., Dr., University of Stockholm 5

Trine Arlund Hass, Ph.D., Aarhus University Carsten Lange, Ph.D., Danish Academy in Rome Outi Merisalo, Prof., Dr., University of Jyväskylä Marianne Pade, Prof. Dr.phil., Aarhus University & Danish Academy in Rome Gitte Lønstrup Dal Santo, Ph.D., Danish Academy in Rome Victor Tschudi, Oh.D., Norwegian Academy in Rome List of sights in Rome Biblioteca Casanatense Biblioteca Corsiniana The Capitol S. Pietro in vincoli Santa Maria del Popolo The Vatican City Villa Giulia Villa Lante (Finnish Institute) 19 July 2012 6