1st Edition

Contamination and Purity in Early Modern Art and Architecture

Edited By Lauren Jacobi, Daniel Zolli Copyright 2021
366 Pages
by Routledge

366 Pages
by Routledge

366 Pages
by Routledge

The concepts of purity and contamination preoccupied early modern Europeans fundamentally, structuring virtually every aspect of their lives, not least how they created and experienced works of art and the built environment. In an era that saw a great number of objects and people in motion, the meteoric rise of new artistic and building technologies, and religious upheaval exert new pressures on... Read more
Introduction, 1. Generation and Ruination in the Display of Michelangelo's Non-finito, 2. The Sacrilege of Soot: Liturgical Decorum and the Black Madonna of Loreto, 3. Sedimentary Aesthetics, 4. 'Adding to the Good Silver with Other Trickery': Purity and Contamination in Clement VII's Emergency Currency', 5. Tapestry as Tainted Medium: Charles V's Conquest of Tunis, 6. Bruegel's Dirty, Little Atoms, 7. Leakage, Contagion, and Containment in Early Modern Venice, 8. Contamination, Purification, Determinism: The Italian Pontine Marshes, 9. Colonial Consecrations, Violent Reclamation, and Contested Spaces in the Spanish Americas, 10. Contamination | Purification, Index

Biography

Lauren Jacobi is the Clarence H. Blackall Career Development Associate Professor of Architectural History in the History, Theory + Criticism section of the Department of Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Daniel M. Zolli is Assistant Professor in the Department of Art History at The Pennsylvania State University. He is a specialist in late medieval and early modern European art, with a particular focus on fourteenth-, fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Italy.