The World of the Early Sienese Painter Author:Hayden B. J. Maginnis, Gabriele Erasmi A richly detailed portrayal of the circumstances in which artists lived and worked at the beginning of the Renaissance. "This is a large and confident book, one that will become the locus classicus for all future study of painters and painting in Siena."—Andrew Ladis, University of Georgia "A great work, Maginnis’s book will be an enduring... more » monument of scholarship. It is uncommonly ambitious, synthetic, and revisionary: one of the few truly significant contributions to the understanding of Italian Renaissance art in our generation."—Paul Barolsky, University of Virginia Siena of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries was one of the great cities of Europe and its artists—Duccio, Simone Martini, and Ambrogio and Pietro Lorenzetti—were among those who reshaped the nature and place of painting first in Italy, then across Europe. Drawing on the extraordinary riches of Sienese archives, on early unpublished secondary sources, and on the recent work of historians, Hayden Maginnis situates early Sienese painters within their society and their city and provides the first comprehensive account of the economic, social, religious, and intellectual world of Siena’s artists. Where did painters live? How much were they paid? What was their social status? Were painters aware of the novel importance of thirteenth-century optics? Were the famous Sienese painters isolated figures, surrounded by a few secondary figures, or were they part of a larger community? These and a host of related questions structure Maginnis’s book, which demonstrates how firmly painters’ lives were embedded in the values and customs of their society and how important the particular character of their society was for the patronage artists received. The World of the Early Sienese Painter is the second volume of a trilogy Maginnis began with Painting in the Age of Giotto (1997), a revisionist work that examines the history of reception of central Italian painting of the period and shows that the age-old belief in Florentine leadership of the Renaissance has distorted a much more interesting historical reality. The third volume will turn from the broad social and cultural history of the present book to a history of early Sienese painting.« less