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Bianchi Bandinelli was born in Siena to Mario Bianchi Bandinelli (1859–1930) and Margherita Ottilie "Lily" von Korn (Bianchi Bandinelli, 1878–1905), who were descended from ancient aristocracy in Siena. His early research focused on the Etruscan centers close to his family lands, Clusium (1925) and Suana (1929). Disgusted with Italianfascism, despite being the man who showed Hitler around Rome under Mussolini, he converted to communism after World War II and became a Marxist. He founded a magazine, Società, together with Cesare Luporini and Romano Bilenchi in 1945.[3]
As an anti-fascist, he was appointed to a number of important art-historical positions immediately after the war. For example, he was director of the new government's fine arts and antiquities ministry (Antichità e Belle Arti, 1945–48). His memoir of fascism in Italy was published in 1995 (Hitler e Mussolini, 1938: il viaggio del Führer in Italia).[4]
Career
From his chairs at the universities of Florence and Rome, Bianchi Bandinelli directed a new breed of Italian archaeologists sensitive to classical history based upon dialectical materialism. He also taught at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands. In the 1950s and 1960s he undertook the writing of comprehensive texts on classical art intended to reach a wide and literate audience. He founded the Enciclopedia dell'arte antica in 1958, and in the same year was elected as a foreign member of the Soviet Academy of Sciences.[5] In the mid-1960s, Bianchi Bandinelli was commissioned to write the two volumes on Roman art for the French Arts of Mankind series. These works brought his writing to a larger audience and helped usher in social criteria for art into a larger and English-speaking audience. In 1967 he founded the Dialoghi di archeologia with his students, one of the most innovative, if controversial, periodicals on classical archaeology.
He was frequently a maverick in his interpretation of art and his arguments were, if not always compelling, forcefully grounded. One such case is his interpretation of the famous Belvedere Apollo, a Roman copy of a Greek work now thought to date to the fourth century B.C. Although hailed by most art historians as a copy of the original work by the Greek master Leochares, Bianchi Bandinelli characterized the piece as a frigid copy of a Hellenistic work without relation to Leochares.
Clusium: Ricerche archeologich e topografiche su Chiusi il suo territorio in età etrusca (1925)
La critica d'arte (journal publisher from 1935, editor and co-founder)
Apollo di Belvedere (1935)
Storicità dell'arte classica (1950)
Nozioni di storia dell'archeologia e di storiografia dell'arte antica: lezioni introduttive del corso di archeologia (1952)
Enciclopedia dell'arte antica, classica e orientale (1958–1966, editor)
Arte etrusca e arte italica (1963, editor)
The Buried City: Excavations at Leptis Magna (1966, editor)
Roma: L'arte romana nel centro del potere (Rome: The Center of Power, 500 B.C. to A.D. 200., 1969)
Roma: La fine dell'arte antica (Rome: The Late Empire, Roman Art A.D. 200–400, 1970)
L'Arte dell'antichità classica (1976, directed).
Dialoghi di archeologia (serial, editor)
Hitler e Mussolini, 1938: il viaggio del Führer in Italia (1995)
References
^Peter von Blanckenhagen (April 1975). "Ranuccio Bianchi Bandinelli". Archaeology: 125.
^Francesca Ridgway (1996) "Bianchi Bandinelli, Ranuccio" in Encyclopedia of the History of Classical Archaeology. Nancy Thomson de Grummond (ed.). Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, vol. 1, p. 144 (note on Belvedere Apollo) and 158.
Kleinbauer, W. Eugene. Research Guide to the History of Western Art. Sources of Information in the Humanities, no. 2. Chicago: American Library Association, 1982, pp. 137–8