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E-raamat: Reception of the Printed Image in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries: Multiplied and Modified

Edited by (University of Warsaw), Edited by
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This book examines the early development of the graphic arts from the perspectives of material things, human actors and immaterial representations while broadening the geographic field of inquiry to Central Europe and the British Isles and considering the reception of the prints on other continents.



This book examines the early development of the graphic arts from the perspectives of material things, human actors and immaterial representations while broadening the geographic field of inquiry to Central Europe and the British Isles and considering the reception of the prints on other continents.

The role of human actors proves particularly prominent, i.e. the circumstances that informed creators’, producers’, owners’ and beholders’ motivations and responses. Certainly, such a complex relationship between things, people and images is not an exclusive feature of the pre-modern period’s print cultures. However, the rise of printmaking challenged some established rules in the arts and visual realms and thus provides a fruitful point of departure for further study of the development of the various functions and responses to printed images in the sixteenth century.

The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, print history, book history and European studies.

The introduction of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license at https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/oa-edit/10.4324/9781003029199-1/introduction-gra%C5%BCyna-jurkowlaniec-magdalena-herman context=ubx&refId=b6a86646-c9f3-490d-8a06-2946acd75fda

Arvustused

"Our editors deserve praise for compiling an engaging set of essays, carefully grouped for thematic unity. Topics address prints across Europe. The pool of contributors is correspondingly diverse, introducing many new voices from central and eastern Europe."

--Historians of Netherlandish Art Reviews

Introduction: People Between Multiplied Things and Modified Images Part
1: Things
1. Multiplicity and Absence: The Negative Evidence of Interactive
Prints
2. Playing with Destiny: Three Late Fifteenth-Century Uncut
Playing-Card Sheets from Florence and Urbino
3. Cultivating Designs: Early
Ornamental Prints and Creative Reproduction
4. Gillet and Germain Hardouyns
Print-Assisted Paintings: Prints as Underdrawings in Sixteenth-Century French
Books of Hours
5. A Passion for Prints: Netherlandish Engravings in an Early
Sixteenth-Century Prayer Book Part 2: People
6. Eroticism under a Watchful
Eye: Censorship and Alteration of Woodcuts in Ovids Metamorphoses between
the Fifteenth and the Sixteenth Centuries
7. Limitations of the Reception and
Consumption of Illustrations in Chronica Polonorum by Maciej of Miechów
(Cracow, 1521)
8. A Foreign Affair. Thomas Gemini and his Booklet of Moresque
Designs
9. Speaking Images and Speaking to the Images: Inscriptions in
Religious Prints Published by Antonio Lafreri Part 3: Images
10. Saint George
from Greater Poland: Complexities of the Reception of Albrecht Dürers
Engraving
11. Changing Fortunes: Dürers Nemesis and the Beham Brothers
12.
The Set of the Four Elements by Hendrick Goltzius and the Use of Engravings
in the Seventeenth Century
13. Different Confessions, Different Visions of
Heaven? Visual Eschatology, Cross-Confessional Conformity and Confessional
Identity Marking in the Picture Motet The Adoration of the Lamb and in Its
Reception
14. Prints and the Beginnings of Global Imagery
Grayna Jurkowlaniec is a professor at the Institute of Art History at the University of Warsaw.

Magdalena Herman is a PhD candidate at the University of Warsaw.