
Treasured Possessions
From the Renaissance to the Enlightenment
Philip Wilson Publishers Ltd
Published on 11. March 2015
Book
Hardback
304 pages
978-1-78130-033-6 (ISBN)
Description
Treasured Possessions explores the significance of beautiful and engaging objects - chosen, acquired and personalised - to the people who once owned them.
With over 300 works discussed, this book takes us on a dazzling visual adventure through the decorative arts, from Renaissance luxuries wrought in glass, bronze and maiolica to the elaborate tablewares and personal adornments available to shoppers in the Age of Enlightenment.
En route, the authors consider the impact of global trade on European habits and expectations: the glamour of the Eastern exotic, the ubiquity of New World products like chocolate and sugar, and the obsession with Chinoiserie decoration. They ask what decorative objects meant to their owners before the age of industrial mass production, and explore how technological innovation and the proliferation of goods from the sixteenth century onwards transformed the attitude of Europeans to their personal possessions.
Illustrated throughout with superb colour photographs, many unfamiliar and hitherto unseen gems of the Fitzwilliam Museum's Applied Arts collection are here published for the first time.
With over 300 works discussed, this book takes us on a dazzling visual adventure through the decorative arts, from Renaissance luxuries wrought in glass, bronze and maiolica to the elaborate tablewares and personal adornments available to shoppers in the Age of Enlightenment.
En route, the authors consider the impact of global trade on European habits and expectations: the glamour of the Eastern exotic, the ubiquity of New World products like chocolate and sugar, and the obsession with Chinoiserie decoration. They ask what decorative objects meant to their owners before the age of industrial mass production, and explore how technological innovation and the proliferation of goods from the sixteenth century onwards transformed the attitude of Europeans to their personal possessions.
Illustrated throughout with superb colour photographs, many unfamiliar and hitherto unseen gems of the Fitzwilliam Museum's Applied Arts collection are here published for the first time.
Reviews / Votes
'A celebration of objects.' James Yorke. The Art Newspaper;More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
506 colour
Dimensions
Height: 280 mm
Width: 230 mm
Thickness: 30 mm
Weight
1909 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78130-033-6 (9781781300336)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Victoria Avery FSA is Keeper of Applied Arts at The Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge. She has published extensively on Italian Renaissance sculpture, and was awarded the Premio Salibeni 2012 for her monograph, Vulcan's Forge in Venus' City: The Story of Bronze in Venice, 1350 - 1650 (2011).
Melissa Calaresu is the McKendrick Lecturer in History at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. She has written on the Grand Tour, autobiographical writing, urban space, political reform and, most recently, the making and eating of ice cream in eighteenth-century Naples.
Mary Laven is Reader in Early Modern History at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Jesus College. She has written extensively about aspects of religion in Renaissance and Counter-Reformation Italy and is now working on Domestic Devotions, an interdisciplinary, collaborative project, funded by the European Research Council.
Melissa Calaresu is the McKendrick Lecturer in History at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. She has written on the Grand Tour, autobiographical writing, urban space, political reform and, most recently, the making and eating of ice cream in eighteenth-century Naples.
Mary Laven is Reader in Early Modern History at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Jesus College. She has written extensively about aspects of religion in Renaissance and Counter-Reformation Italy and is now working on Domestic Devotions, an interdisciplinary, collaborative project, funded by the European Research Council.
Content
List of Lenders & Contributing Authors
Director's Foreword
Acknowledgements
Preface
ESSAY 1: 'The meaning of things in the early modern world'
SECTION 1: A NEW WORLD OF GOODS
ESSAY 2: 'Shopping in the Renaissance
ESSAY 3: 'Material Invention from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment'
SECTION 2: DESIRING & ACQUIRING
ESSAY 4: 'Tudor and Stuart treasures'
SECTION 3: THE IRRESISTIBLE
ESSAY 5: 'Global objects'
SECTION 4: THE FASHIONABLE BODY
ESSAY 6: 'Luxury and fashion in the eighteenth century'
SECTION 5: AT HOME & ON DISPLAY
ESSAY 7: 'The ordinary and the everyday'
ESSAY 8: 'Devotional objects'
Handlist of exhibits
Bibliography
Picture Credits
Index
Summary Contributor Biographies
Director's Foreword
Acknowledgements
Preface
ESSAY 1: 'The meaning of things in the early modern world'
SECTION 1: A NEW WORLD OF GOODS
ESSAY 2: 'Shopping in the Renaissance
ESSAY 3: 'Material Invention from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment'
SECTION 2: DESIRING & ACQUIRING
ESSAY 4: 'Tudor and Stuart treasures'
SECTION 3: THE IRRESISTIBLE
ESSAY 5: 'Global objects'
SECTION 4: THE FASHIONABLE BODY
ESSAY 6: 'Luxury and fashion in the eighteenth century'
SECTION 5: AT HOME & ON DISPLAY
ESSAY 7: 'The ordinary and the everyday'
ESSAY 8: 'Devotional objects'
Handlist of exhibits
Bibliography
Picture Credits
Index
Summary Contributor Biographies