Art and Technology in Early Modern Europe
Art History Special Issues
1. Edition December 2016
248 Pages, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Short Description
These essaysexplore the relationship between artistic and technological advances from the Renaissance to the Industrial Revolution. Together they provide a broad definition of technology for this period and address the influence of technological shifts on the history of early modern art. The essays discuss a wide range of early modern artists' tools, instruments, skills, and techniques and their historical applications and also highlight a frequently overlooked aspect of research within art history.
In 12 essays by a distinguished group of art historians, Art and Technology in Early Modern Europe explores the relationship between artistic and technological advances from the Renaissance to the Industrial Revolution.
* Provides a broad definition of technology for this period and addresses the influence of technological shifts on the history of early modern art
* Covers c.1420-1820, the time period between the advent of the printed image and that of the photographically produced image
* Discusses a wide range of early modern artists' tools, instruments, skills, and techniques and their historical applications
* Highlights a frequently overlooked aspect of research within art history that yields substantial insights into the analysis of the making and viewing of art
* Historians in the Laboratory: Reconstruction of Renaissance Art and Technology in the Making and Knowing Project (Pamela H. Smith and The Making and Knowing Project)
* Works in Progress: Painting and Modelling in Seventeenth-Century Holland (Jan Blanc)
* Looking in the Mirror of Renaissance Art (Genevieve Warwick)
* Squaring the Circle: The Telescopic View in Early Modern Landscapes (Amy Knight Powell)
* After Galileo: The Image of Science in Niccolò Tornioli's Astronomers (Giulia Martina Weston)
* The Monument to Louis XIV at the Place Vendôme (1699) as a Technical Achievement: A Question of Interest (Etienne Jollet)
* A Clock Picture as a Philosophical Experiment: The Tableau Mécanique in the Physics Cabinet of Bonnier de la Mosson (Hanneke Grootenboer)
* Of Air Pumps and Teapots: Joseph Wright of Derby, John Singleton Copley and the Technology of Seeing (Bryan J. Wolf)
* Technologies of Illusion: De Loutherbourg's Eidophusikon in Eighteenth-Century London (Ann Bermingham)
* Telegraphic Images in Post-Revolutionary France (Richard Taws)
* Seizing Attention: Devices and Desires (Barbara Maria Stafford)
Index
Genevieve Warwick is Editor of Art History and author of The Arts of Collecting (2000 and 2012), Bernini: Art as Theatre (2012), and Picturing Venus in the Renaissance Print (2014), as well as collections of essays on Poussin, prints and drawings and Caravaggio, and numerous articles on art collections, art and science, and architecture and urbanism. Her research has received awards from the Kress Foundation, the Leverhulme Trust, the Getty Foundation, the Arts and Humanities Research Council UK, and the Renaissance Society of America.