Mute Painting: Deafness and Speechlessness in the Theory and Historiography of Dutch Art
-
The lives and careers of deaf and mute painters in the early modern Netherlands challenge the perception of disabled artists as self-taught outsiders and the assumption that a premodern experience of disability must have necessarily resulted in poverty and exclusion. Rather than approaching deafness and speechlessness as marginalizing “defects,” I propose to regard them as categories that allow us to reconsider how painting was understood in the seventeenth century. As part of that discourse, this article also examines the idea of sensory compensation, including its roots and impact on theory and historiography of art.
TitreMute Painting: Deafness and Speechlessness in
the Theory and Historiography of Dutch Art
Auteur
Source
Journal of Historians of Netherlandish Art ; Vol. 16 ; N° 1 (2024), p.32
Période de créationvroegmoderne tijd
Illustrationsill.
MatérielARTIKEL
MatérielArticle
Document électronique
Sujetschilderen, schilderijen, doofheid
Mot clé géographiqueNederland
Mot clé de personne Jan Jansz. de Stomme, Hendrick Avercamp, Johannes Thopas