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An old book, a hidden drawing: how Sydney held the answer to an Italian Renaissance mystery

An old book, a hidden drawing: how Sydney held the answer to an Italian Renaissance mystery

When librarians from the University of Sydney found a sketch and an inscription in the back of a 1497 copy of Dante's Divine Comedy, they called in Renaissance expert Professor Jaynie Anderson. Soon the discovery was confirmed: the sketch was by the hand of master painter Giorgione, and the inscription solved the mystery of Giorgione's life and death. A book of scholarship on that remarkable discovery has just been published by Melbourne University Press. Guest: Jaynie Anderson, Emeritus Professor and Ufficiale dell'Ordine della Stella d'Italia Producer: Alex Tighe

Late Night Live - Separate stories podcast · Australian Broadcasting Corporation

February 10, 202615m 24s

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Show Notes

When librarians from the University of Sydney found a sketch and an inscription in the back of a 1497 copy of Dante's Divine Comedy, they called in Renaissance expert Professor Jaynie Anderson. Soon the discovery was confirmed: the sketch was by the hand of master painter Giorgione, and the inscription solved the mystery of Giorgione's life and death. A book of scholarship on that remarkable discovery has just been published by Melbourne University Press.

  • Guest: Jaynie Anderson, Emeritus Professor and Ufficiale dell'Ordine della Stella d'Italia
  • Producer: Alex Tighe

Topics

giorgionedantecomediadivine comedyjaynie andersonlibraryincunable