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'shows the reader that engagement with the particularities of medium can lead to the richest of interpretations.'
Renaissance Quarterly
Christy Anderson is Associate Professor of the History of Art at the University of Toronto
Anne Dunlop is Associate Professor of Art History at Tulane University in New Orleans
Pamela H. Smith is Seth Low Professor of History, Columbia University in the City of New York
Part I:Matter
1. The matter of the medium: some tools for an art-theoretical interpretation of materials Ann-Sophie Lehmann
2. The matter of ideas in the working of metals in early modern Europe Pamela H. Smith
3. On the origins of European painting materials, real and imagined Anne Dunlop
4. Gold coins and gold leaf in early Italian paintings Irma Passeri
Part II: Practices
5. The Genealogy of Jean le Blanc: accounting for the materiality of the medieval Eucharist Aden Kumler
6. Lead whites mysteries Spike Bucklow
7. Material distinctions: plaster, terracotta and wax in the Renaissance artists workshop Eckart Marchand
8. Rocks and reverence: Inka and Spanish perceptions of stonework in the early modern Andes Carolyn Dean
Part III: Cultural logics
9. Precious stones, material beings: performative materiality in fifteenth-century northern art Brigitte Buettner
10. Carving life: the meaning of wood in early modern European sculpture Christina Neilson
11. Arti povere, 13001650 Michael Cole
12. Polish stone, Venetian glass, and red Hungarian marble: the materials of a Renaissance chapel in Jagiellonian Poland Katie Jakobiec
13. Reveal or conceal: chopines and the display of material wealth in early modern Valencia and Venice Elizabeth Semmelhack
14. Entanglements of body, text and stone: the crafting and connoisseurship of inkstones in eighteenth-century China Dorothy Ko
Index