Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Mary Berenson (born Mary Whitall Smith; 1864 in Pennsylvania – 1945 in Italy) was an art historian, now thought to have had a large hand in some of the writings of her second husband, Bernard Berenson.

  2. Germantown, Pennsylvania, 1864 – Villa I Tatti, Florence, Italy, 1945. (Art Historian, Art Critic, Writer and Lecturer) Mary Berenson, a scholar of Italian Renaissance art, was the collaborator and wife of Bernard Berenson, whom she often assisted with his research, writing, lecturing, and business affairs. Born Mary Whitall Smith, she was ...

  3. Through photographs, documents, student writings, and scholarly essays, Berenson and Harvard: Bernard and Mary as Students offers engaging portrayals not only of the two students but also of Harvard College and the Harvard Annex in the late nineteenth century.

  4. In 1890 Berenson was introduced to Mary through a mutual friend, Gertrude Hitz-Burton. Having already become unhappy in her marriage, Mary followed Berenson back to the continent to study art under his tutelage. She eventually left her husband and lived in Italy and travelled with Berenson.

  5. As his wife and business partner, Mary was one of the most significant influences on Bernard Berensons career. Throughout their marriage of more than 50 years, even though she complained of his violent rage and his “slipshod sentences” as a writer, Mary never lost her admiration for his keen knowledge of art, connoisseurship, and culture.

  6. Mary Berenson, a scholar of Italian Renaissance art, was the wife of Bernard Berenson, whom she often assisted in his research, writing, and business affairs. ON THE FUTURE OF I TATTI Berenson's 1956 statement, in which he expressed the desire that his estate be transformed into an “institute to promote aesthetical and humanistic ...

  7. While Greene seems to have destroyed Berensons letters to her, hers to him remain at I Tatti, the former home of Bernard and his wife, Mary, on the outskirts of Florence, now the Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies.