Votive panels and popular piety in early modern Italy:

In the late fifteenth century, votive panel paintings, or tavolette votive, began to accumulate around reliquary shrines and miracle-working images throughout Italy. Although often dismissed as popular art of little aesthetic consequence, more than 1,500 panels from the fifteenth and sixteenth centu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jacobs, Fredrika Herman 1952- (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: New York, NY Cambridge Univ. Press 2013
Edition:1. publ.
Subjects:
Online Access:Inhaltsverzeichnis
Summary:In the late fifteenth century, votive panel paintings, or tavolette votive, began to accumulate around reliquary shrines and miracle-working images throughout Italy. Although often dismissed as popular art of little aesthetic consequence, more than 1,500 panels from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries are extant, a testimony to their ubiquity and importance in religious practice. Humble in both their materiality and style, they represent donors in prayer and supplicants petitioning a saint at a dramatic moment of crisis. In this book, Fredrika H. Jacobs traces the origins and development of the use of votive panels in this period. She examines the form, context and functional value of votive panels, and considers how they created meaning for the person who dedicated them as well as how they accrued meaning in relationship to other images and objects within a sacred space activated by practices of cultic culture
Physical Description:XIII, 248 S. Ill.
ISBN:9781107023048
1107023041

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