2 resultados para kaunokirjallisuus - teema - suo
em Consorci de Serveis Universitaris de Catalunya (CSUC), Spain
Resumo:
Luigi Pirandello (1867-1936) affida alle pagine del suo ultimo dramma, I Giganti della montagna, l’estrema riflessione sul rapporto tra l’esperienza artistica e la vita, attraverso il mito, inteso come possibilità di ricreazione e rinnovamento. Il rapporto tra persona e personaggio costituirà il punto di partenza per l’analisi dello spazio drammatico, luogo emblematico del dialogo tra l’arte e la vita, incarnato nella personalità dei protagonisti: il mago Crotone e la contessa Ilse. Il riconoscimento finale della capacità salvifica e creativa dell’arte rivelerà il confine friabile che separa—ed unisce al contempo—la vita e il palcoscenico.
Resumo:
One of the founders of numismatics in Modern Age was the archbishop of Tarragona and renowned jurist Antonio Agustín. He was educated during the mid-sixteenth century mainly in Italy, particularly in Bologna and Padua. His role in the development of antiquarian studies – and interest in collecting – ran parallel to the development of numismatics in the Cinquecento. His interest in realia , i.e., the materials and documents perceived as primary evidence of history understood in a global sense, make him a pioneer in setting the trends and methodologies which would be later employed by Bernard de Montfaucon. The period Antonio Agustín spent in Bologna, at the Reale Collegio di Spagna, between 1539 and 1544, afforded him the opportunity to enter a very cultivated circle where the admiration and study of the Antique was well established since the mid-fifteenth century. The cultural effervescence taking place in Bologna was encouraged by the court of Giovanni II Bentivoglio and the University alike. Artists also contributed to the development of antiquarian knowledge, and the painter Amico Aspertini (ca. 1475-1552) exemplifies this. It is clear that Antonio Agustín certainly benefited from the scholarly environment in Bologna during the first half of the Cinquecento, which had been firmly anchored since the fertile Quattrocento. Although the documentary evidence is scarce, and it is difficult to pinpoint the details, it is undeniable that Antonio Agustín was heavily influenced by his Bolognese experience.