My new article “Forme e ideologie di una (ri)scoperta. Il Medioevo di Roma tra Ottocento e Novecento” has been published in the exhibition catalogue "Maria Barosso. Artista e archeologa nella Roma in trasformazione".
Available here: www.academia.edu/165196894/Gi...
Posts by Giovanni Gasbarri
My article “Percorsi francescani per gli oggetti bizantini in Italia: uno sguardo sull’Umbria / Franciscan Pathways for Byzantine Objects in Italy: A View from Umbria” has been published in “Navigare nell'Italia bizantina, arte, musei, mostre e web.” Available here: www.academia.edu/152393736/Gi...
My new article is available on Academia.edu: "A Harmonious Conglomerate of Particles". It explores the reception of Byzantine art in the age of Modernism and its links to abstraction. Read it here: www.academia.edu/145981257/Gi...
Before photographs became standard in art-historical publications, Byzantium circulated through engravings and lithographs. My latest article traces how these practices intersected with the rise of Byzantine art history in the 19th century. Full text here: l1nq.com/fmU6P
Philipp was right, that's a great pic!
Happy to share my piece "Duch v algoritmu" in the Czech magazine re:vize. I look at how generative AI turns prompts like “historically accurate Byzantine emperor/empress” into recycled 19th-century fantasies, reshaping our visual memory of the past. Read here: www.revize-casopis.cz/vsechny-clan...
Thrilled to have taken part in the conference “C’est Byzance! La Bibliothèque d’art et d’archéologie et les Arts de Byzance” at the @inha.fr in Paris. My heartfelt thanks to the whole team for the warm hospitality!
#INHA #ByzantineStudies #ArtHistory
The Roundtable "The Two Cultures Natural Sciences and Humanities, Convergent Paths?" begins!
Excited to take part in the roundtable "The Two Cultures. Natural Sciences and Humanities, Convergent Paths?" organized by the Center for Medieval Visual Cultures and Research Communication at Masaryk University.
@re-cent.bsky.social @epinicion.bsky.social @apaladine.bsky.social
In this recently published article, I examine the fascinating reliquary attributed to Pietro Teutonico and preserved in the Museum of the Porziuncola in Assisi. This 14th-century artifact features a very intriguing Etruscan 'twist'... Available on academia.edu.
Rome, Villa Borghese - January 2025
A view of the Temple of Asclepius from the lake
#rome #villaborghese
May the new year that follows be the best you have ever had. Have a blissful 2025!
(Edward Burne-Jones - Nativity - The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens)
If you’re in Lucca, don’t miss the extraordinary collection of medieval sculptures at the Villa Guinigi National Museum. Some of the finest pieces I’ve ever seen
www.luccamuseinazionali.it/en/guinigi/m...
"Deadline ahead"
(Santa Maria in Valle Porclaneta, Italy)
A candid pic of me discussing Byzantines and Franciscans after the Fourth Crusade at the "Navigare nell'Italia bizantina" conference in Rome. NB: I have two legs, one is just crossed under the table.
saras.uniroma1.it/sites/defaul...
"Navigare nell'Italia bizantina. Arte, musei, mostre, web" (Sapienza University of Rome, 4-6 June 2024) A multidisciplinary perspective on Byzantine artifacts preserved and exhibited in museums, collections, and churches across Italy. Full program in the first comment.
My new article, "A King, a Priest, and (Maybe) an Idol: The David Casket and Its Afterlife in Rome," has finally been published on "Arte Medievale"! It deals with Ahimelech, David, and mysterious idols that should not be there. On academia.edu or upon request.
I can only adore the diploma of my Licentiate in Mediaeval Studies that has just arrived directly from Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies.
I would have never imagined finding my name written in Latin one day!
Excellent pics, thanks!
After quite some time, I've finally decided to update my Humanities Commons account. You can find me there as
@giogasbarri.
The stone pines in Villa Borghese on my way back from the British School at Rome.
My new article "Christ against the Idols: The Relationship between Gospel Iconography and Idolatry in Byzantine Art" (in Italian) has finally been published in "Quaderni di Storia Religiosa Medievale" 26 (2023). More info on academia.edu or via DM!
The early Christian narthex of San Vitale in Rome - photo taken during my evening walk
Hard to resist those second-hand bookshops and their 3€ delights...
My lecture on "Christ Against the Idols: Gospel Iconography and Idolatry in Byzantine Art" is scheduled for tomorrow at 12 noon Eastern time. Check out the program for all upcoming Yale Lectures in Late Antique and Byzantine Art and Architecture below.
Really honored to be included in the Yale Lectures in Late Antique and Byzantine Art and Architecture program. My talk will focus on Gospel iconography and idolatry in Byzantine Art.
ism.yale.edu/news/yale-le...
Thank you! This has been a very long path and I hope to finish the book soon in the best possible way. A couple of articles are already out and a third one is being published these days - you can find them on Academia.edu.
Mission accomplished. Now it's time to finish the book.