Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Bestseller
BestsellerE-Book
Author Peers, Glenn, author.

Title Animism, Materiality, and Museums : How Do Byzantine Things Feel? / Glenn Peers.

Publication Info. Leeds : Arc Humanities Press, 2021.
Baltimore, Md. : Project MUSE, 0000.
2021.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 All Libraries - Shared Downloadable Materials  JSTOR Open Access Ebook    Downloadable
All patrons click here to access this title from JSTOR
 University of Saint Joseph: Pope Pius XII Library - Internet  WORLD WIDE WEB E-BOOK JSTOR    Downloadable
Please click here to access this JSTOR resource
Edition New edition.
Description 1 online resource (1 volume) : illustrations (black and white, and colour).
data file rda
Series Collection development, cultural heritage, and digital humanities
Book collections on Project MUSE.
Note Description based on print version record.
Contents Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Part 1. Animate Materialities from Icon to Cathedral -- Chapter 1. Showing Byzantine Materiality -- Chapter 2. The Byzantine Material Symphony: Sound, Stuff, and Things -- Part 2. Byzantine Things in the World: Animating Museum Spaces -- Chapter 3. Prelude on Transfiguring Exhibition -- Chapter 4. Transfiguring Materialities: Relational Abstraction in Byzantium and Its Exhibition -- Chapter 5. Framing and Conserving Byzantine Art: Experiences of Relative Identity -- Part 3. Pushing the Envelope, Breaking Out: Making, Materials, Materiality -- Chapter 6. Angelic Anagogy, Silver, and Matter's Mire -- Chapter 7. Late Antique Making and Wonder -- Chapter 8. Senses' Other Sides -- Epilogue -- Bibliography -- Index
Summary Byzantine art is normally explained as devotional, historical, highly intellectualized, but this book argues for an experiential necessity for a fuller, deeper, more ethical approach to this art. Written in response to an exhibition the author curated at The Menil Collection in 2013, these essays challenge us to search for novel ways to explore and interrogate the art of this distant culture. They marshal diverse disciplines-modern art, environmental theory, anthropology-to argue that Byzantine culture formed a special kind of Christian animism. While completely foreign to our world, that animism still holds important lessons for approaches to our own relations to the world. Mutual probings of subject and art, of past and present, arise in these essays-some new and some previously published-and new explanations therefore open up that will interest historians of art, museum professionals, and anyone interested in how art makes and remakes the world.
Byzantine art is normally explained as devotional, historical, highly intellectualized, but this book argues for an experiential necessity for a fuller, deeper, more ethical approach to this art. Written in response to an exhibition the author curated at The Menil Collection in 2013, this monograph challenges us to search for novel ways to explore and interrogate the art of this distant culture. They marshal diverse disciplines-modern art, environmental theory, anthropology-to argue that Byzantine culture formed a special kind of Christian animism. While completely foreign to our world, that animism still holds important lessons for approaches to our own relations to the world. Mutual probings of subject and art, of past and present, arise in these essays-some new and some previously published-and new explanations therefore open up that will interest historians of art, museum professionals, and anyone interested in how art makes and remakes the world.
Subject Animism in art.
Art, Byzantine -- Exhibitions.
Art, Byzantine.
Art, Byzantine. (OCoLC)fst00816072
Animism in art. (OCoLC)fst01986552
Genre/Form Exhibition catalogs. (OCoLC)fst01424028
Added Author Project Muse, distributor.
Other Form: Print version : 9781942401735
-->
Add a Review