Description
Public Painting and Visual Culture in Early Republican Florence provides a comprehensive analysis of how painted works in public spaces influenced Florentine society from the late 13th through 15th centuries. George Bent demonstrates that public paintings were not merely decorative elements but served as crucial vehicles for political messaging, civic identity, and social cohesion.
The study examines major commissions, including frescoes in government buildings, religious confraternities, and urban spaces, revealing how patronage networks and artistic production intersected with republican governance. Bent contextualizes these works within broader questions of visual communication, audience reception, and the relationship between art and power in Renaissance Florence.
This work contributes significantly to art historical scholarship by illuminating how communities engaged with monumental painting to negotiate identity, authority, and shared values during a transformative period in European history.







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