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2017
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3 pages
1 file
Blog section, "Materialized Identities. Objects, Affects and Effects in Early Modern Culture. 1450-1750" project website (<https://www.materializedidentities.com/>); February 13th, 2017. <https://www.materializedidentities.com/single-post/2017/02/13/The-Museo-del-Vetro-in-Murano-A-Visit-Worth-Making>
2021
This collection embraces the increasing interest in the material world of the Renaissance and the early modern period, which has both fascinated contemporaries and initiated in recent years a distinguished historiography. The scholarship within is distinctive for engaging with the agentive qualities of matter, showing how affective dimensions in history connect with material history, and exploring the religious and cultural identity dimensions of the use of materials and artefacts. It thus aims to refocus our understanding of the meaning of the material world in this period by centring on the vibrancy of matter itself. To achieve this goal, the authors approach "the material" through four themes - glass, feathers, gold paints, and veils - in relation to specific individuals, material milieus, and interpretative communities. In examining these four types of materialities and object groups, which were attached to different sensory regimes and valorizations, this book charts ...
A Arte de Coleccionar. Lisboa, a Europa e o Mundo na Época Moderna (1500-1800). The Art of Collecting. Lisbon, Europe and the Early Modern World (1500-1800), 2019
Codex Aqvilarensis 36/2020, pp. 199-218, 2020
Can a museum, such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, embrace the art and culture of Medieval Iberia in a way that is honest, informative and stimulating? Focusing primarily on the Museum’s display of medieval art of Iberia and its 1993 exhibition project The Art of Medieval Spain: A.D.500-1200, that remained unfulfilled, and its 1992 prequel Al-Andalus: The Art of Islamic Spain I reflect on these ambitious enterprises endeavoring to look at their international context. The goal of both projects was to offer an overview of the main artistic trends in Iberia —from 500 to 1200— using strategic portable works of art in all media. The Museum’s rich holdings of Spanish art made it the logical institution to explore these issues. The Museum could also utilize monumental settings at the Museum such as the Romanesque apse of San Martin from Fuentidueña (Segovia) installed at The Cloisters and Romanesque wall paintings as a critical springboard for exploring artistic identity, meaning and interchange. Combined with major art collectors such as Archer Huntington (1870-1955), founder of the Hispanic Society of America, J. P. Morgan (1837-1913) and William Randolph Hearst (1863-1951) American museums nurtured a new understanding of Medieval Spain. Recent interest in Medieval Spain is exemplified by the Minneapolis Institute of Art 2015 key acquisition of a monumental Romanesque stone crucifixion group. Possibly originating in Northern Spain it also reveals many rich sculptural links to Burgundian Brionaise sites, and, thus, exemplifies important issues of identifying artistic place in a time of mobility.
Mark Van Strydonck, Jeroen Reyniers, Fanny Van Cleven (eds.) Relics @ the Lab An Analytical Approach to the Study of Relics, 2018
The book is from the series Interdisciplinary Studies in Ancient Culture and Religion, 20, it can be purchased here: https://www.peeters-leuven.be/detail.php?search_key=9789042936676&series_number_str=20&lang=en SUMMARY: The book Relics @ the Lab, an Analytical Approach to the Study of Relics includes a series of studies presented at the first international workshop Relics @ the Lab organized by the Royal Institute of Cultural Heritage (KIK-IRPA) in Brussels, Belgium (27-28 October 2016). The papers cover a large variety of themes as well as analytical methods. Some papers focus on the primary relics while others deal with the nature and origin of secondary as well as tertiary relics. The first group of papers emphases on the archaeological authenticity of the relics, the second group elucidate the use, additions and manipulations of the relics through the ages. The applied analytical techniques are very divers. Radiocarbon and physical anthropology are the main tools to study the primary relics, while dye analysis, imaging techniques, textile analysis and dendrochronology are used to study the secondary and tertiary relics. Sometimes unexpected techniques, like the analysis of writing ink or the determination of plants and excrements, complete the wide range of analytical methods used to understand the origin, nature and context of the relics. br />Academics as well as professionals working in archaeology, art history, museum labs and conservation sciences will find this an invaluable reference source.
2016
Poster presentation for the International Workshop "Relics at the Lab".
PhD dissertation, University of Oslo 2013. Unpublished.
The history of museums could get inspired on the procedures of material studies and of Anthropology in order to take a new stand and move away from the institutional approach and consider the approach of objects traditionally labelled as museum objects. The so-called "museum pieces" are supposed to have a number of characteristics, particularly some great historical and artistic qualities, sometimes an heritage quality, but above all the ability to make "friends" around the community or around the world. In all these respects, it is proposed here a number of research procedures that may supplement or enrich the directions usually assigned to the history of institutions.
In studies on the sensory activation of the sacred, there is a special place for relics. In addition to their evocative power, they have determined many itineraries that converge in places of greater religious pathos. Along with expedients of images and planimetric layout, relics offered the basis for a sort of storytelling that, on one hand, indulged the visual expectations of the faithful and, on the other, reassured the worshipper that he was on the right path. This paper examines the case of one portal, and concludes with an example of an ambulatory closely connected to the Via Francigena. The purpose of this article is to prove that, even without a significant relic presence, the sensory activation of the sacred can take place in other ways. The first part focuses on a Romanesque portal, originally located in the church of San Leonardo al Frigido in Tuscany, now held in the Met Cloisters Museum in New York. The section dedicated to this work of art analyses attributive issues and focuses on the portal’s social role. The conclusion of the article investigates some aspects of the ambulatory in the Abbey of Sant’Antimo.
Journal of Medieval Iberian Studies, 2013
For historians of medieval Iberian art and architecture, María Rosa Menocal's most important legacy lies in her work's normalization of a culturally decentralized, multidisciplinary frame through which medieval visual objects became part of a broadly shared network of cultural production that was unrestricted by firm boundaries between particular polities or "faith groups." While Menocal was not the first to advance such an approach, her persuasive promotion of it in works such as The Ornament of the World and the co-authored The Arts of Intimacy dovetailed closely with concurrent trends within the discipline of art history: new attentiveness to the variability of the Iberian cultural economy; a renewed concern with questions of reception and meaning; revived emphasis on close, contextual readings; and an openness to extra-disciplinary methodologies. The conceptual and disciplinary flexibility that Menocal's work encouraged now lies at the very heart of current work on Iberian visual culture.
Revista Ensayos Pedagógicos, 2024
Pasavento: Revista de Estudios Hispánicos, 2022
TEMA 1 DIPLOMADO EN ROBOTICA, 2023
Colonial Objects in Early Modern Sweden and Beyond. From the Kunstkammer to the Current Museum Crisis, 2022
Plant Pathology, 2021
Social Anthropology, 2021
Coudée Royale Égyptienne gradué sur le Mètre, 2020
Malaria Journal, 2019
Revista Kavilando, 2020
Journal of Environmental Engineering, 2015
Journal of Indian Academy of Oral Medicine and Radiology, 2011
BioMed Research International, 2014