Queer Making
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Karl Whittington
About this book
What role does desire play in the making of art objects? Art historians typically answer this question by referring to historical evidence about an artist’s sexual identity or to particular kinds of imagery. But what about anonymous artists? Or works whose subject matter is mainstream?
We know little about the identities and personalities of most premodern artists, but this should not hold us back from thinking about their embodied experience. In this book, Karl Whittington contends that we can “queer” the works of anonymous makers by thinking about their embodied experiences creating art. Considering issues of touch, pressure, and gesture across substances such as wood, stone, ivory, wax, cloth, paint, and metal, Whittington argues for an erotics of artisanal labor, in which the actions of hand, body, and breath interact in intimate ways with materials. Whittington takes seriously the agency of materials and technical processes, arguing that they necessarily placed the bodies of artists and artisans into physical situations and psychological states that can be read through the lens of desire.
Combining historical evidence with speculative description, this evocative set of essays broadens our understanding of the motivations and experiences of premodern artists. It will appeal to scholars and students of art history, medieval studies, gender studies, queer studies, and anthropology.
Broadens our understanding of the motivations and experiences of premodern artists by combining historical evidence with speculative description.
We know little about the identities and personalities of most premodern artists, but Whittingon argues that this should not hold us back from thinking about their embodied experience.
This book argues that we can “queer” the works of anonymous historical makers by thinking about their embodied experiences working with materials.
Karl Whittington is Professor of Art History at Ohio State University. He is also the author of Body-Worlds: Opicinus de Canistris and the Medieval Cartographic Imagination and Trecento Pictoriality: Diagrammatic Painting in Late Medieval Italy.
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Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
vii -
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List of Illustrations
ix -
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Acknowledgments
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Introduction: Queer Pygmalions
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1 Stone and the Sculptor’s Touch
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2 Holding Hands in Wood
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3 Warming the Ivory Martyrs
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4 Handling Wax
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5 The Painter’s Breath and Brush
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6 Sainte Foy and the Pleasure of Submission
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7 Fittings
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Conclusion: Maintenance
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Notes
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Bibliography
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Index
181