'Lisa Pon, one of the most distinguished historians of early prints, has given us a biography of the several ‘lives’ of a single image - a lone surviving impression of an anonymous early woodcut. Pon’s exemplary case study deftly combines modern critical theory with deep historical sleuthing to elucidate the significance across the centuries of both Madonna of the Fire and its replications for Forlì’s religious and civic community alike.'
Larry Silver - Farquhar Professor of Art History, University of Pennsylvania
'With imagination and wit, Lisa Pon tells the story of an unremarkable artifact’s illustrious career. It is a telling tale about the complex relation of persons to things.'
Joseph Leo Koerner - Harvard University, Massachusetts
'In A Printed Icon in Early Modern Italy, Lisa Pon excavates the cultural life of a singular and extraordinary object. Anchoring her study in a fifteenth-century Italian print that miraculously survived a fire, she expertly guides the reader through its placements and displacements over time and space.'
Michael Gaudio - University of Minnesota
'A reading centered not only on the image, but on how it came to be used and the cultural heritage it helped generate … a volume destined to be read and studied across the world.'
Roberto Balzani
Source: translation from SHARP News
'A volume destined to be read and studied across the world.'
Source: Il Resto del Carlino
'As a contribution to the history of Renaissance prints, Pon’s unique microhistory of the Madonna del Fuoco situates the printed image in the rich context of miracle-working images in various media, modes of enshrinement and the culture of relics, civic pride and political rivalries, monuments, chronicles and festivals, and even the practices of Renaissance fire brigades.'
Evelyn Lincoln
Source: Art in Print