Indecent Bodies in Early Modern Visual Culture Hardback
Edited by Fabian Jonietz, Mandy Richter, Alison Stewart
Part of the Visual and Material Culture, 1300-1700 series
Hardback
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Description
The life-like depiction of the body became a central interest and defining characteristic of the European Early Modern period that coincided with the establishment of which images of the body were to be considered ‘decent’ and representable, and which disapproved, censored, or prohibited.
Simultaneously, artists and the public became increasingly interested in the depiction of specific body parts or excretions.
This book explores the concept of indecency and its relation to the human body across drawings, prints, paintings, sculptures, and texts.
The ten essays investigate questions raised by such objects about practices and social norms regarding the body, and they look at the particular function of those artworks within this discourse.
The heterogeneous media, genres, and historical contexts north and south of the Alps studied by the authors demonstrate how the alleged indecency clashed with artistic intentions and challenges traditional paradigms of the historiography of Early Modern visual culture.
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Available to Order - This title is available to order, with delivery expected within 2 weeks
- Format:Hardback
- Pages:292 pages, 84 Illustrations, black and white
- Publisher:Amsterdam University Press
- Publication Date:20/12/2022
- Category:
- ISBN:9789463725835
Information
-
Available to Order - This title is available to order, with delivery expected within 2 weeks
- Format:Hardback
- Pages:292 pages, 84 Illustrations, black and white
- Publisher:Amsterdam University Press
- Publication Date:20/12/2022
- Category:
- ISBN:9789463725835