Morbidezza is a Renaissance artistic concept that describes an naturalistic delicacy in flesh tones. It can also describe pejoratively as being soft, weak, and effeminate.[1] The term was coined by the Florentine philosopher Marsilio Ficino.[2]
^"Morbidezza". Centre national de ressources textuelles et lexicales (in French). Retrieved 22 March 2022.
^Chauveau, Sophie (2005). Le Rêve Botticelli (in French). Éditions Gallimard. p. 481. ISBN 978-2-07-034175-7.
Morbidezza is a Renaissance artistic concept that describes an naturalistic delicacy in flesh tones. It can also describe pejoratively as being soft, weak...
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than her bravura was the melting glow at the centre of her voice, her morbidezza (softness)." Shortly after, she stepped in for two performances of Rigoletto...
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finding of the painting that "this is an original of Leonardo: the 'morbidezza', the condition of the 'crepatura' are unique and exactly equivalent to...
Symbolist psychology: "the Symbolist artist is a decadent, swept over by morbidezza and eroticism, persuaded by suffering, despising the bourgeois life. Jewels...
Mantegna, Bonsignori is more modern in his style and his coloring has more morbidezza. He excelled in painting animals, which he was fond of introducing in...