Abstract
Early modern objects, images and artworks often served as nodes of discussion and contestation. If images were sometimes contested by external and often competing agencies (religious and secular authorities, image theoreticians, inquisitions, or single individuals), artists and objects were often just as likely to impose their own rules and standards through the continuation or contestation of established visual traditions, styles, iconographies, materialities, reproductions and reframings.
Centering on the capacity of the image as agent — either in actual legal processes or, more generally, in the creation of new visual standards — this volume provides a fi rst exploration of image normativity by means of a series of case studies that focus in different ways on the intersections between the limits of the sacred image and the power of art between 1450 and 1650.
The fourteen contributors to this volume discuss the status of images and objects in trials; contested portraits, objects and iconographies; the limits to representations of suffering; the tensions between theology and art; and the significance of copies and adaptations that establish as well as contest visual norms from Europe and beyond.
Item Type: | Editorship |
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EU Funded Grant Agreement Number: | 680192 |
EU Projects: | Horizon 2020 > ERC Grants > ERC Starting Grant > ERC Grant 680192: SACRIMA - The Normativity of Sacred Images in Early Modern Europe |
Faculties: | History and Art History > Department of Art History > Art History |
Subjects: | 700 Arts and recreation > 700 Arts 900 History and geography > 940 History of Europe |
ISBN: | 978-2-503-58466-9 |
Place of Publication: | Turnhout, Belgium |
Language: | English |
Item ID: | 93467 |
Date Deposited: | 25. Oct 2022, 08:36 |
Last Modified: | 07. Jun 2024, 13:15 |