Perspective as Practice Renaissance Cultures of Optics
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| Publication date | 2019 |
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| ISBN (electronic) |
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| Series | Techne: Knowledge, Technique, and Material Culture |
| Number of pages | 510 |
| Publisher | Turnhout: Brepols |
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| Abstract |
This book is about the development of optics and perspective between the
fifteenth and seventeenth centuries. The point of departure of this
book is the recognition of the polysemy of perspective, that is, the
plurality of meanings of perspective. To bring forward the polysemy of
perspective, this book explores the history of perspectiva
in terms of practices, a conglomerate of material, social, literary and
reproductive practices, through which knowledge claims in perspective
were produced, promoted, legitimated and circulated in and through a
variety of sites and institutions. The ways optical knowledge was used
by different groups in different places (such as the university
classroom, the anatomist's dissection table, the goldsmith's workshop,
and the astronomer's observatory) defined the meanings of Renaissance
perspective. As this period was characterized by widespread 'optical
literacy', perspective was defined in different ways in different places
and sites by various groups of practitioners. Most interestingly, sites
such as the theatre, the instrument maker's workshop and the courtly
garden were home to practices of perspective which have remained on the
margin, or even completely invisible, in the historiographies of optics
and perspective. The book also brings out the differences between
codifications of perspectiva and
practice. There were a variety of non-Albertian constructions to create
the illusion of space, and other types of optical knowledge were as
important to artists as the geometry of perspective.
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| Document type | Book (Editorship) |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1484/M.TECHNE.5.116014 |
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