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E-raamat: Ornament and Monstrosity in Early Modern Art

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Early modern art features a remarkable fascination with ornament, both as decorative device and compositional strategy, across artistic media and genres. Interestingly, the inventive, elegant manifestations of ornament in the art of the period often include layers of disquieting paradoxes, creating tensions - monstrosities even - that manifest themselves in a variety of ways. In some cases, dichotomies (between order and chaos, artificiality and nature, rational logic and imaginative creativity, etc.) may emerge. Elsewhere, a sense of agitation undermines structures of statuesque control or erupts into wild, unruly displays of constant genesis. The monstrosity of ornament is brought into play through strategies of hybridity and metamorphosis, or by the handling of scale, proportion, and space in ambiguous and discomforting ways that break with the laws of physical reality. An interest in strange exaggeration and curious artifice allows for such colossal ornamental attitude to thrive within early modern art.
List of Illustrations
7(6)
Introduction 13(32)
Chris Askholt Hammeken
Maria Fabricius Hansen
Part I Grotesques
1 Ambiguous Delights: Ornamental Grotesques and Female Monstrosity in Sixteenth-Century Italy
45(28)
Maria Fabricius Hansen
2 Dissonant Symphonies: The Villa d'Este in Tivoli and the Grotesque
73(22)
Luke Morgan
Part II Sacred Space and Narrative
3 Outside-In: The Intrusion of Ornament into Sacred Narrative
95(38)
Tianna Helena Uchacz
4 That savage should mate with tame': Hybridity, Indeterminacy, and the Grotesque in the Murals of San Miguel Arcangel (Ixmiquilpan, Mexico)
133(20)
Barnaby Nygren
5 Decoration in the Desert: Unsettling the Order of Architecture in the Certosa di San Martino
153(24)
Maria-Anna Aristova
Part III Agency and Ornament Enlivened
6 Masquing/(Un)Masking: Animation and the Restless Ornament of Fontainebleau
177(26)
Lisa Andersen
7 Sea-Change: The Whale in the Florentine Loggia
203(18)
Chris Askholt Hammeken
8 Ornament and Agency: Vico's Poetic Monsters
221(24)
Frances Connelly
Part IV A Historical Perspective
9 Trafficking the Body: Prolegomena to a Posthumanist Theory of Ornament and Monstrosity
245(32)
Jacob Wamberg
Index 277
Chris Askholt Hammeken has a PhD in Art History from Aarhus University. Maria Fabricius Hansen is Associate Professor of Art History at the University of Copenhagen.