Private Life: A New York Review Podcast
In this episode of Private Life, the art historian Ingrid D. Rowland joins Jarrett Earnest for an in-depth discussion about art history and disegno, an Italian word for “design” that was also a Renaissance-era concept describing some artists’ ability simultaneously to draw and to conceive of a grander scheme in their work. Rowland also talks about the lives and work of some of the Italian Renaissance’s most significant figures: Raphael; Caravaggio; Giorgi Vasari, a sixteenth-century artist and writer from Florence; and Agostini Chigi, a banker and art patron. Rowland is Professor Emerita of History at the University of Notre Dame. Her most recent book is The Lies of the Artists: Essays on Italian Art, 1450–1750 (2024). In 2017, she cowrote the biography The Collector of Lives: Giorgio Vasari. She has been a contributor to The New York Review of Books since 1994, writing extensively on art, art history, architecture, and theater. Her debut in our pages was “Character Witnesses, [https://www.nybooks.com/articles/1994/12/01/character-witnesses/]” an essay about Renaissance portrait medals. Other articles have included “Caravaggio Lost and Found [https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2025/03/13/caravaggio-lost-and-found-ecce-homo-unveiled/],” about two rediscovered Caravaggio paintings, “Roman Rivalries [https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2017/08/17/michelangelo-sebastiano-roman-rivalries/],” about Michelangelo and Sebastiano, and “The Virtuoso [https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2020/08/20/raphael-the-virtuoso/],” a rapturous review of a 2020 Raphael exhibition in Rome. Read the essays discussed in this episode and many others with a subscription to The New York Review of Books, which, in addition to twenty issues a year, gives you access to our full archive since 1963, searchable on our website.
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