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Contribution to Book
Il mare di pittura: Domestic Pictures and Sociability in the Late Sixteenth-Century Venetian Interior
The Early Modern Italian Interior: Objects, People, Domesticities 1400-1700 (2013)
  • Elizabeth Carroll Consavari, San Jose State University
Abstract
The growing demand for household goods in Renaissance Italy, as documented by Richard Goldthwaite and others, was the driving force behind the painted picture becoming the most popular household object within the homes of the urban elite.1 In cinquecento Venice, which is the focus of this chapter, paintings become the most frequently listed object in inventories, overtaking and surpassing the presence of antiquities in Venetian households by the end of the sixteenth century. While the relationship between domestic art collecting and consumption is complex, the degree to which art collections contributed to Venetian domestic sociability – those social rituals that connected the family both to each other and to the wider society beyond the walls of the palazzo – deserves a closer look.
Disciplines
Publication Date
2013
Editor
Erin J. Campbell, Stephanie R. Miller and Elizabeth Carroll Consavari
Publisher
Ashgate
ISBN
978-1-4094-6811-0
DOI
10.4324/9781315615813
Citation Information
Elizabeth Carroll Consavari. "Il mare di pittura: Domestic Pictures and Sociability in the Late Sixteenth-Century Venetian Interior" The Early Modern Italian Interior: Objects, People, Domesticities 1400-1700 (2013)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/elizabeth_consavari/2/