This collection provides a genuinely fresh outlook on the Italian
interior and will form a rich resource for scholars and students of the
Renaissance.
- Brings together an interdisciplinary group of scholars, combining
innovative approaches, case studies, and methodological critiques
- Expands the discourse on the Renaissance home, ultimately challenging
traditional notions of public and private, interior and exterior,
ideals and reality
- Examines under-studied spaces of the interior, such as baths and
chapels, and offers new insights into more familiar topics such as
identity, status, and family memory
- Includes a wide range of primary sources from visual and material
evidence to archival documents