Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Ekphrastic Image-making in Early Modern Europe, 1500–1700: Intersections, cartea 79

Editat de Arthur J. DiFuria, Walter Melion
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 dec 2021
In epideictic oratory, ekphrasis is typically identified as an advanced rhetorical exercise that verbally reproduces the experience of viewing a person, place, or thing; more specifically, it often purports to replicate the experience of viewing a work of art. Not only what was seen, but also how it was beheld, and the emotions attendant upon first viewing it, are implicitly construed as recoverable, indeed reproducible.
This volume examines how and why many early modern pictures operate in an ekphrastic mode: such pictures claim to reconstitute works of art that solely survived in the textual form of an ekphrasis; or they invite the beholder to respond to a picture in the way s/he responds to a stirring verbal image; or they call attention to their status as an image, in the way that ekphrasis, as a rhetorical figure, makes one conscious of the process of image-making; or finally, they foreground the artist’s or the viewer’s agency, in the way that the rhetor or auditor is adduced as agent of the image being verbally produced.

Contributors: Carol Elaine Barbour, Ivana Bičak, Letha Ch’ien, James Clifton, Teresa Clifton, Karl Enenkel, Arthur DiFuria, Christopher Heuer, Barbara Kaminska, Annie Maloney, Annie McEwen, Walter Melion, Lars Cyril Nørgaard, Dawn Odell, April Oettinger, Shelley Perlove, Stephanie Porras, Femke Speelberg, Caecilie Weissert, Elliott Wise, and Steffen Zierholz.
Citește tot Restrânge

Din seria Intersections

Preț: 112454 lei

Preț vechi: 137138 lei
-18% Nou

Puncte Express: 1687

Preț estimativ în valută:
21521 22355$ 17877£

Carte indisponibilă temporar

Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004109971
ISBN-10: 9004109978
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Intersections


Cuprins

Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Notes on the Editors
Notes on the Contributors

Introduction: Ekphrastic Image-Making
Arthur J. DiFuria and Walter S. Melion

Part 1: Humanism, Print, Ekphrasis


1 ‘The Reader Seems to Have Seen Rather Than Read’: Ekphrasis as an Instrument of Religious Persuasion in Erasmus of Rotterdam
Barbara A. Kaminska

2 The Artist’s Frame of Reference in Antoine Sucquet’s Via Vita Aeternae
Carol Barbour

3 ‘No Less Difficult to Paint … Than to Describe’: Chaos in Michel de Marolles’s Tableaux du Temple des Muses
James Clifton

4 The Edge of Ekphrasis: Bellori and Reproductive Printmaking
Annie Maloney

Part 2: Poem, Image, Ekphrasis


5 Mythography as Ekphrasis: Ludovico Lazzarelli’s De gentilium deorum imaginibus, and the Poetics of Humanism
Karl Enenkel

6 Antithesis, Ekphrasis, and Antiphrasis in Joachim du Bellay’s Ruinscape, Les Antiquités de Rome
Arthur J. DiFuria

7 Through a Poet’s Eyes: Jan van der Noot’s Poem on the Capital Sins
Caecilie Weissert
With a translation of the poem by Anna Dlabacova

8 Virtual Reality of the Early Modern Anatomical Poem in Denmark and England
Ivana Bičak

Part 3: Sacred Ekphrasis


9 Robert Campin and Jan van Ruusbroec: Spiritual Conflagrations and Ekphrastic Mysticism
Elliott D. Wise

10 Transfiguring Raphael, Reforming Christ: Ekphrastic Image-Making in Nicolas Poussin’s The Miracle of St. Francis Xavier
Steffen Zierholz

11 Levels to Ekphrasis in the Tableaux de la Pénitence
Lars Cyril Nørgaard

Part 4: Ekphrastic Images


12 Art between Fact and Fantasy: Tracing the Afterlife of Ekphrastic Architecture in Renaissance Italy
Femke Speelberg

13 Ekphrasis and Ovidian Poetics in Hendrick Goltzius’s Landscape with Venus and Adonis of ca. 1598
Walter S. Melion

14 Rembrandt’s Judas Returning the Silver of 1629: Visual and Literary Associations
Amy Golahny

15 ‘By This Blood Most Chaste […]’ (Livy, The History of Rome, Book 1.59): Passion and Politics in Rembrandt’s Lucretia of 1666
Shelley Perlove

16 Finding, Stealing, Translating: The Subject(s) of Tintoretto’s Brera Scuola Grande di San Marco Istoria
Letha C. Ch’ien

Part 5: Nature, Art, Ekphrasis


17 Reveries of the Source
Christopher P. Heuer

18 Ekphrasis and the Romance of Botany in the Age of Pietro Andrea Mattioli
April Oettinger

part 6: Global Ekphrasis


19 Seeing ‘de flandes’
Stephanie Porras

20 ‘Escribieron en mi memoria’: Ekphrasis in the Pastoral Fiction of New Spain
Teresa Clifton

21 Ekphrasis and the Global Eighteenth Century: A.E. van Braam Houckgeest’s Collection of Chinese Art
Dawn Odell

Index Nominum

Notă biografică

Walter S. Melion, Ph.D. (1988, University of California, Berkeley) is Asa Griggs Candler Professor of Art History at Emory University. He has published widely on Netherlandish art and art theory, on early modern printmaking, and on meditative, mnemonic, and emblematic image-making, amongst other topics.

Arthur J. DiFuria, Ph.D. (2008, University of Delaware) is Chair and Professor of Art History at Savannah College of Art and Design. In addition to several articles on sixteenth-century antiquarianism, prints, and drawings, he is the editor of Genre Imagery in Early Modern Northern Europe: New Perspectives (Routledge, 2016) and the author of Maarten van Heemskerck’s Rome: Antiquity, Memory, and the Netherlandish Cult of Ruins (Brill, 2019).