Description
Monika Schmitter’s scholarly work provides an in-depth examination of Andrea Odoni, one of Venice’s most significant art collectors during the Renaissance period. Through meticulous research, the author reconstructs Odoni’s extraordinary collection and the Venetian palace that housed it, offering insights into early modern Italian culture, commerce, and aesthetic values.
The book explores how art collecting functioned as a marker of status and sophistication among Venice’s merchant elite. Schmitter analyzes the types of objects Odoni acquired—paintings, sculptures, antiquities, and curiosities—and their arrangement within his palace, revealing how collectors curated spaces to display knowledge and refinement. The work situates Odoni’s collecting practices within broader contexts of Renaissance humanism, trade networks, and the development of connoisseurship.
By examining one collector’s passion and legacy, this book illuminates the pivotal role of private collections in shaping early modern European art and culture, making it essential reading for scholars of Renaissance Italy, art history, and the history of collecting.







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