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The thing of mine I have loved the best ; meaningful jewels

Couverture du livre « The thing of mine I have loved the best ; meaningful jewels » de Cinthia Hahn et Beatriz Chadour-Sampson aux éditions Paul Holberton
Résumé:

This book studies forty-six pieces of European jewelry - pendants, reliquaries, amulets, and talismans - from the eighth to the eighteenth century. The title «The thing of mine I have loved the best» comes from the medieval will of an English duchess who bequeaths a reliquary jewel to her son.... Voir plus

This book studies forty-six pieces of European jewelry - pendants, reliquaries, amulets, and talismans - from the eighth to the eighteenth century. The title «The thing of mine I have loved the best» comes from the medieval will of an English duchess who bequeaths a reliquary jewel to her son. It expresses the sentiment that jewels appealed (then, as well as now) to the truest and strongest emotions. This book concerns objects that were «meaningful» jewels, a term we choose to designate a wide range of precious wearable objects that had particular meaning. An Anglo-Saxon glass pendant, a Spanish «magic belt,» a Mexican lantern pendant (once adorned with New World feathers), and an Imperial Memento Mori Skull, these are just a few of the remarkable objects included. These intimate meaningful jewels are meant to be opened, touched, manipulated, pinned, gathered and strung. In the same series of books on jewelry inaugurated in 2007 with Toward an Art History of Medieval Rings (repr. 2014), the present volume divides the jewels into six sections (such as «Ways and Means of Prayer,» «Hidden and Revealed,» «Kissed and Touched») that creatively explore the complex meanings these objects held for their owners. Cynthia Hahn, internationally known for her explorative ground-breaking studies of the reliquary arts, has written the stimulating essays and accompanying entries in the body of the book. She has collaborated here with Beatriz Chadour-Sampson, who, with her great mastery of the history of jewelry, has contributed a scholarly catalogue that authenticates, describes, and situates each object. Together the essays, entries, and catalogue create a context that helps us see this jewelry in a new way and adds new research that establishes the historical and artistic importance of a relatively little-studied group of «meaningful jewels.» In the words of Cynthia Hahn, «Jewels, and that word here includes jewelry, are literally the foundation of art in the Middle Ages. It is surely not irrelevant that these things are so beautiful".

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