Multiplicity and absence: the negative evidence of interactive prints
By looking at the clues left in texts, physical evidence, and creative renderings of now-gone objects, one can better establish the ways the many functions of Renaissance-era prints manifested themselves. Studying these minute absences within the context of the explosion of early modern ephemera and...
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1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
2021
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Schlagworte: | |
Zusammenfassung: | By looking at the clues left in texts, physical evidence, and creative renderings of now-gone objects, one can better establish the ways the many functions of Renaissance-era prints manifested themselves. Studying these minute absences within the context of the explosion of early modern ephemera and its later reception reinforces the uniqueness of print survivals of every kind. This chapter’s first main example of a lost interactive print deals with an annotated, so-called Veronica or Vera Icon woodcut. More universally applicable even than the errant clergy was the inescapability of mortality, and flap prints often commingled with sexual tension. The second main example of the chapter takes the form of one such deadly reminder. The scientific instrument print, an equally ephemeral genre that aimed to count its possessor’s remaining time on earth more accurately, is the chapter’s third main example of applied printmaking with significant attrition. |
Beschreibung: | Illustrationen |
ISBN: | 978-0-367-46511-7 |
Internformat
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520 | 3 | |a By looking at the clues left in texts, physical evidence, and creative renderings of now-gone objects, one can better establish the ways the many functions of Renaissance-era prints manifested themselves. Studying these minute absences within the context of the explosion of early modern ephemera and its later reception reinforces the uniqueness of print survivals of every kind. This chapter’s first main example of a lost interactive print deals with an annotated, so-called Veronica or Vera Icon woodcut. More universally applicable even than the errant clergy was the inescapability of mortality, and flap prints often commingled with sexual tension. The second main example of the chapter takes the form of one such deadly reminder. The scientific instrument print, an equally ephemeral genre that aimed to count its possessor’s remaining time on earth more accurately, is the chapter’s third main example of applied printmaking with significant attrition. | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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index_date | 2024-07-03T16:03:36Z |
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institution | BVB |
isbn | 978-0-367-46511-7 |
language | English |
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physical | Illustrationen |
publishDate | 2021 |
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spelling | Schmidt, Suzanne Kathleen Karr 1978- Verfasser (DE-588)136350143 aut Multiplicity and absence the negative evidence of interactive prints Suzanne Karr Schmidt 2021 Illustrationen txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier By looking at the clues left in texts, physical evidence, and creative renderings of now-gone objects, one can better establish the ways the many functions of Renaissance-era prints manifested themselves. Studying these minute absences within the context of the explosion of early modern ephemera and its later reception reinforces the uniqueness of print survivals of every kind. This chapter’s first main example of a lost interactive print deals with an annotated, so-called Veronica or Vera Icon woodcut. More universally applicable even than the errant clergy was the inescapability of mortality, and flap prints often commingled with sexual tension. The second main example of the chapter takes the form of one such deadly reminder. The scientific instrument print, an equally ephemeral genre that aimed to count its possessor’s remaining time on earth more accurately, is the chapter’s third main example of applied printmaking with significant attrition. Geschichte 1500-1600 gnd rswk-swf Druckgrafik (DE-588)4113357-2 gnd rswk-swf Geografie (DE-588)4020216-1 gnd rswk-swf Interaktion (DE-588)4027266-7 gnd rswk-swf Acheiropoieta (DE-588)4620842-2 gnd rswk-swf Memento mori (DE-588)4169407-7 gnd rswk-swf Druckgrafik (DE-588)4113357-2 s Interaktion (DE-588)4027266-7 s Geografie (DE-588)4020216-1 s Acheiropoieta (DE-588)4620842-2 s Memento mori (DE-588)4169407-7 s Geschichte 1500-1600 z DE-604 The reception of the printed image in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries / edited by Grażyna Jurkowlaniec and Magdalena Herman New York ; London, 2021 Seite [27]-47, pl. Routledge Research in Art History (DE-604)BV046915737 978-0-367-46511-7 |
spellingShingle | Schmidt, Suzanne Kathleen Karr 1978- Multiplicity and absence the negative evidence of interactive prints Druckgrafik (DE-588)4113357-2 gnd Geografie (DE-588)4020216-1 gnd Interaktion (DE-588)4027266-7 gnd Acheiropoieta (DE-588)4620842-2 gnd Memento mori (DE-588)4169407-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4113357-2 (DE-588)4020216-1 (DE-588)4027266-7 (DE-588)4620842-2 (DE-588)4169407-7 |
title | Multiplicity and absence the negative evidence of interactive prints |
title_auth | Multiplicity and absence the negative evidence of interactive prints |
title_exact_search | Multiplicity and absence the negative evidence of interactive prints |
title_exact_search_txtP | Multiplicity and absence the negative evidence of interactive prints |
title_full | Multiplicity and absence the negative evidence of interactive prints Suzanne Karr Schmidt |
title_fullStr | Multiplicity and absence the negative evidence of interactive prints Suzanne Karr Schmidt |
title_full_unstemmed | Multiplicity and absence the negative evidence of interactive prints Suzanne Karr Schmidt |
title_short | Multiplicity and absence |
title_sort | multiplicity and absence the negative evidence of interactive prints |
title_sub | the negative evidence of interactive prints |
topic | Druckgrafik (DE-588)4113357-2 gnd Geografie (DE-588)4020216-1 gnd Interaktion (DE-588)4027266-7 gnd Acheiropoieta (DE-588)4620842-2 gnd Memento mori (DE-588)4169407-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Druckgrafik Geografie Interaktion Acheiropoieta Memento mori |
work_keys_str_mv | AT schmidtsuzannekathleenkarr multiplicityandabsencethenegativeevidenceofinteractiveprints |