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El. knyga: Courtly Mediators: Transcultural Objects between Renaissance Italy and the Islamic World

(University of Oxford)
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Aug-2023
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781009276177
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 03-Aug-2023
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781009276177

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In Courtly Mediators, Leah R. Clark investigates the exchange of a range of materials and objects, including metalware, ceramic drug jars, Chinese porcelain, and aromatics, across the early modern Italian, Mamluk, and Ottoman courts. She provides a new narrative that places Aragonese Naples at the center of an international courtly culture, where cosmopolitanism and the transcultural flourished, and in which artists, ambassadors, and luxury goods actively participated. By articulating how and why transcultural objects were exchanged, displayed, copied, and framed, she provides a new methodological framework that transforms our understanding of the Italian Renaissance court. Clark's volume provides a multi-sensorial, innovative reading of Italian Renaissance art. It demonstrates that the early modern culture of collecting was more than a humanistic enterprise associated with the European roots of the Renaissance. Rather, it was sustained by interactions with global material cultures from the Islamic world and beyond.

This book will appeal to anyone interested in Renaissance culture and more specifically the art and material culture of the Italian Renaissance courts and their relationship with other courts across the Mediterranean including the Mamluks and Ottomans.

Recenzijos

'Clark makes sophisticated arguments of considerable interest to art historians in an effort to capture the complex geographical processes at work as objects move and change as they move, and how originating places, entrepots, and destinations change as objects move through them Her book is highly recommendable for those interested in the geographical turn in material cultural studies and in the intriguing and beautiful objects themselves.' Elizabeth Baigent, Journal of Historical Geography ' Clark's work will be of great benefit to future research on a wide range of topics, such as the cultural ramifications of the conquest of Otranto, the multi-layered complexity of transcultural exchanges between Italian and Hungarian courts, and the careers of individual artists like Costanzo da Ferrara who moved between Terrara, Naples and Istanbul in the 1470s and 1480s.' Robert Brennan, Renaissance Studies ' invites a reassessment of how transfers and exchanges could occur beyond the interactions of artists and patrons, underscoring instead the tangible - sometimes immaterial - encounters that activated a visual culture of translations and transmutations.' Cynthia Fang, RACAR

Daugiau informacijos

Courtly Mediators examines Italian Renaissance collecting practices from the perspective of trade, diplomacy, and global encounters.
1. Diplomatic entanglements: mediating objects and transcultural
encounters;
2. Mobile things/mobile motifs: ornament, language, and haptic
space;
3. The peregrinations of porcelain: from mobility to frames;
4. Fit
for the gods: porcelain in Alfonso dEste's camerini;
5. From the Silk Roads
to the court apothecary: aromatics and receptacles; Conclusion: arresting
mobility.
Leah R. Clark is Associate Professor of History of Art in the Department for Continuing Education and Fellow of Kellogg College at the University of Oxford. She is the author of Collecting Art in the Italian Renaissance Court (2018) and co-editor, with Kathleen Christian, of European Art and the Wider World, 1350-1550 (Manchester University Press, 2017).