Abstract
This essay charts the role of armor in Renaissance practices of knowledge. Since the advent of gunpowder warfare, armor was largely unfit for combat, yet still became a centerpiece of princely representation and was prominently displayed in early collection spaces. Rather than illustrating chivalric virtues or antiquarian taste, such suits in my reading signal a shift towards a physiological fashioning of learning. Through juxtaposing two key sets of armor – one "gothic" suit situated in the studiolo, the other a "grotesque" garniture for a chamber of curiosities –, my paper traces how these embodied settings conflated epistemological with political sensibilities. While the earlier ensemble acted as a mnemonic ‘prosthesis’ that enhanced the mind of the wearer, the latter evoked natural history imagery to remap the order of things around personal authority. Objects of armor thus spotlight the interplay of material and political culture in engineering the early modern subject.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 89-118 |
Number of pages | 30 |
Journal | Espacio, Tiempo y Forma, Serie VII: Historia del Arte |
Volume | 6 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Dec 7 2018 |