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Wastework: early modern stories from the cutting room floor
Abstract
"Paper scraps, metal filings, wool shearings... dismantled sets, spoiled rags, animal blood... How did these ostensibly worthless by-products of art and industry avoid the flames of the kitchen hearth or the sweep of the apprentice’s broom to spark ingenuity, generate new forms, and propel further acts of creation? Wastework moves beyond the well-researched category of spoliation, foregrounding waste as a material expression of the practices of ordering and classification by which people adjudicated between collection and disposal, wanted and unwanted, salvation and loss. Authors follow the afterlives of spent books and soiled textiles, peek behind the curtain of machine theater, and venture into the smith’s foundry and the chemist’s laboratory.Bringing together research from historians of art, architecture, science, and the environment, this volume examines acts of disposal and reuse and the consequences these carry for the study of early modern material culture. Drawing from the fields of discard studies and ecomaterialism, contributors test the usefulness of contemporary formulations—secondary product cycles, material fatigue, metabolic flows, sustainability, recycling—while also proposing new categories with which to reimagine the discarded past."-- Back cover.
Contributors
Publisher
Publication
Rome-Italy: Officina libraria, [2024]
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Subject
Type
Language
Classification
ISBN
- 9788833672793
- 8833672794
Annotations / title notes
Notes
At head of title: Decay, loss, and conservation in art history ; Bibliotheca Hertziana, Max Planck Institute for art history.
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