Belleza y memoria en la corte napolitana de Alfonso V (1442-1458)
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Rather than a preference for any specific aesthetic model, the defining characteristics of the concept of beauty in the court of Alfonso the Magnanimous were luxury and sumptuousness. To a large extent. these two principles underlie the works that the monarch commissioned from his agents and ambassadors. Other criteria equally notable were strangeness and exceptionality. Alfonso and his courtesans always demonstrated a great fascination towards works that contained curious and surprising details, many of them being the fruit of the special skills that their creators deployed in a series of visual devices. This is the case with the spectacular effects in the paintings by Jan van Eyck or in the ability of Dello Delli to design compositions based on geometric perspective, an interest in the strange and the exceptional that also fed the monarch's interest in natural curiosities and antiquities in certain cases such as the Grotta by Virgilio, which brought together memory and magic legend. The search for magnificence and splendour added another dimension to the concept of beauty in Alfonso's court. Here the most paradigmatic expressions are to be found in the multiple spectacles organised by the king, in particular, the banquets, which were occasions for a sophisticated and sumptuous display of all types lavish objects, from tapestries and profane pieces of silver and gold work to the rich clothing of the participants. It was a climate of opulence that was accented still further with the introduction of a series of effects and resources (music, food, floral decorations, etc.) that gave them a strong and clear synaesthetic dimension. This resulted in ephemeral manifestations that, thanks to the accounts of chroniclers and historians, survived in the memory of the history of worship in Naples and helped to make Aragonese rule a golden period for the city
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