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Touching objects: intimate experiences of Italian fifteenth-century art


By


Abstract

"This groundbreaking book spans the fields of art history, material culture, and gender studies in its examination of a range of objects from Italian Renaissance society. Addressing painted and sculpted portraits, marriage and betrothal gifts, and paxes, Adrian W. B. Randolph uses themes such as family and individual memory, windows, perspectival space, and touch to investigate how these items were experienced at the time, particularly by women. Rather than focusing on the social contexts of the objects, this original study deals with the objects themselves, asking how individuals lived with, looked at, and responded to complex things that at the time hovered between the nascent category of art and the everyday. Accompanied by beautiful and engaging accounts and illustrations of late-14th- and 15th-century Italian art, this compelling and thought-provoking argument makes the case for an alternate account of art and experience that challenges many conceptions about Renaissance art"--

Publisher

  • Publication

    New Haven: Yale University Press, 2014

  • Year


Is about

  • Subject

  • Period

    1400-1500


Type

  • Language


Classification

  • ISBN

    • 0300204787
    • 9780300204780

Persistent URL