9781003029380_10.4324_9781003029380-18.pdf

Renaissance musical instruments frequently feature masterfully carved figures, intricate geometric and arabesque patterns, expensive and exotic materials, and a variety of pictorial representations. The headstocks and pegboxes of stringed instruments, in particular, often feature carved finials with...

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Έκδοση: Taylor & Francis 2023
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-765432023-10-05T02:28:06Z Chapter 15 Fantastic Finials Vai, Emanuela Italian musical culture, Italy, Music, Musical pictures, Renaissance, Renaissance art theory, Visual media, fifteenth century music, musical media, paragone bic Book Industry Communication::A The arts::AC History of art / art & design styles bic Book Industry Communication::A The arts::AV Music Renaissance musical instruments frequently feature masterfully carved figures, intricate geometric and arabesque patterns, expensive and exotic materials, and a variety of pictorial representations. The headstocks and pegboxes of stringed instruments, in particular, often feature carved finials with anthropomorphic, zoomorphic, and monstrous figures. Taking as its entry-point the pegboxes of three citterns from the Ashmolean Museum's collection of stringed instruments, this chapter explores what these visual and material features say about the role that musical objects played in Renaissance social worlds, beyond their music-making capacities. While there has long been critical interest in the material culture of music in Renaissance studies, object-orientated approaches and new materialist frameworks invite us to reflect more deeply on the social, political, and affective dimensions of the materiality of musical instruments. Renaissance musical instruments were often designed for the eye as much as the ear, to be seen—and otherwise sensed—as well as played. A focus on their ornamental features opens valuable windows onto questions of power in Renaissance music cultures. Such a focus directs attention to the material environments and social settings in which these instruments were played and dis-played. These elaborately decorated musical objects articulated values concerning gender, wealth, knowledge, and prestige. Their ornamentation also invites reflection on the circulation of aesthetic influences beyond Europe, on the colonial and racial relations of Renaissance music within an interconnected global culture. 2023-10-04T11:33:32Z 2023-10-04T11:33:32Z 2023 chapter 9780367465391 9781032036083 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/76543 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9781003029380_10.4324_9781003029380-18.pdf Taylor & Francis Music and Visual Culture in Renaissance Italy Routledge 10.4324/9781003029380-18 10.4324/9781003029380-18 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb 446ff4f7-00a9-4722-9f31-8644eb95cc52 f1196b48-25e5-4b94-9fc8-06aec3066142 9780367465391 9781032036083 Routledge 29 Worcester College, University of Oxford open access
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description Renaissance musical instruments frequently feature masterfully carved figures, intricate geometric and arabesque patterns, expensive and exotic materials, and a variety of pictorial representations. The headstocks and pegboxes of stringed instruments, in particular, often feature carved finials with anthropomorphic, zoomorphic, and monstrous figures. Taking as its entry-point the pegboxes of three citterns from the Ashmolean Museum's collection of stringed instruments, this chapter explores what these visual and material features say about the role that musical objects played in Renaissance social worlds, beyond their music-making capacities. While there has long been critical interest in the material culture of music in Renaissance studies, object-orientated approaches and new materialist frameworks invite us to reflect more deeply on the social, political, and affective dimensions of the materiality of musical instruments. Renaissance musical instruments were often designed for the eye as much as the ear, to be seen—and otherwise sensed—as well as played. A focus on their ornamental features opens valuable windows onto questions of power in Renaissance music cultures. Such a focus directs attention to the material environments and social settings in which these instruments were played and dis-played. These elaborately decorated musical objects articulated values concerning gender, wealth, knowledge, and prestige. Their ornamentation also invites reflection on the circulation of aesthetic influences beyond Europe, on the colonial and racial relations of Renaissance music within an interconnected global culture.
title 9781003029380_10.4324_9781003029380-18.pdf
spellingShingle 9781003029380_10.4324_9781003029380-18.pdf
title_short 9781003029380_10.4324_9781003029380-18.pdf
title_full 9781003029380_10.4324_9781003029380-18.pdf
title_fullStr 9781003029380_10.4324_9781003029380-18.pdf
title_full_unstemmed 9781003029380_10.4324_9781003029380-18.pdf
title_sort 9781003029380_10.4324_9781003029380-18.pdf
publisher Taylor & Francis
publishDate 2023
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