Metamorphosis in the Arts of Early Modernity and Beyond
This course will pursue the theme of
metamorphosis in Renaissance art and
decoration in terms of narrative illustration
but also as a ruling metaphor and as a figure
of style, capable of embodying a wide variety
of meanings. A starting point will be to
understand the enduring appeal of Ovid’s
Metamorphoses and the various ways in
which it was received and understood during
this period. While Ovid’s great epic poem was
plumbed by a stream of painters and
sculptors to explore the erotic and
transformative nature of love, in the applied
arts, where meaning tended to reside in
allegory and figure, the drama, violence, and
enchantment of the lovers’ tales could act as
poetic symbol and rhetorical gloss to more
philosophical ideas. Ovidian poetics were a
means by which to understand the natural
world, offering etiologies of individual species
of plants and minerals, as well as
explanations for larger principles of creation,
generation, and change. In a related manner,
metamorphosis came to have a symbolic
value that was directed to the processes of
artistic creation itself. The course will thus
explore the place of Ovidian myth within the
broader movement of classical revival and the
ways it came to occupy a conceptual space
within important areas of culture: from
informal and suburban contexts of villa and
garden, bedchamber and bathroom, to the
cabinet and Kunstkammer, to grander
expressions of power in the halls of state.
Finally, it will seek to understand how it
endured so powerfully within western culture
and society up to the present day. 3 credits.
Satisfies the chronological requirement.