Getting started with the collection:
No image available
Early modern merchants as collectors
Abstract
Early Modern Merchants as Collectors' encourages the rethinking of collecting not as an elite, often aristocratic pursuit, but rather as a vital activity that has engaged many different groups within society. The essays included in this volume consider merchants not only as important collectors in their own right, as opposed to merely agents or middlemen, but also as innovators who determined taste. Through bringing together contributions on merchant collectors across a wide geographical spread, including England, The Netherlands, Venice, Safavid Iran, China and Japan, among other locations, it aims to challenge the often Eurocentric view of the study of collecting that has shaped the discipline to date. The early modern period and its wunderkammern formed the subject of some of the earliest, foundational texts on collecting. This volume expands on such previous scholarship, taking a more in-depth look at a particular class of collectors and investigating their motivations, social and economic circumstances, and the intellectual ideas and purposes that informed their collecting. It offers a fresh approach to the understanding of the role of merchants in early modern societies and will serve as a resource to historians of art, science, museums, culture and economics, as well as to scholars of transcultural studies.
Contents
Beginning to collect -- Behaving as collectors -- The role of provenance -- Collecting for a specific purpose -- Dealers as collectors -- Later generations of merchant collectors -- Merchants and collectors in the Islamicate world.
Contributors
Publisher
Publication
Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2017
Year
Is about
Subject
Period
1500-1700
Type
Language
Classification
ISBN
- 9781472469823
- 1472469828
Annotations / title notes
Notes
Conference held in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford 15-16.06.2012
Persistent URL
To refer to this object, please use the following persistent URL: