Titian’s models muddle the boundaries between art and life. They lived in two worlds: in the social world and the world of the artwork. The questions assembled in the model were therefore not just aesthetic; they also redefined art’s relationship to life. How much distance should art take from lived experience? And how much does our perception of reality change when art trespasses the territory of the real? These questions are the subject of this talk.
Dr Joost Keizer (PhD Leiden University ’08) is Assistant Professor at the University of Groningen. He haswrittenÌýMichelangelo and the Politics of ArtÌý(Yale University Press),ÌýThe Realism of Piero della Francesca: The Life & the WorkÌý(Ashgate), and a book on Leonardo da Vinci with illustrations by Christina Christoforou (Laurence King). He has co-edited a volume onÌýThe Transformation of the Vernacular in Early Modernity. And he has published articles on Michelangelo, fifteenth-century portraiture, Leonardo da Vinci, Albrecht Dürer, and the concept of style.