Beuckelaer and the Art of Dining
Title
Beuckelaer and the Art of Dining
Subtitle
Northern Painting, Food, and Social Class in Early Modern Italy
Price
€ 103,99
ISBN
9789048550791
Format
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Number of pages
188
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
17 x 24 cm
Also available as
Hardback - € 104,00
Table of Contents
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Acknowledgements
Introduction - Beuckelaer as Periscope
Chapter One - Kitchens, Markets, and Marthas in Antwerp Houses
Chapter Two - Beuckelaer and Margaret of Parma’s Flemish Identity
Chapter Three - Fashion Spreads: Campi and the Affaitadi in Cremona (and beyond)
Chapter Four - Parties, Privacy, Performance, and Paintings in the Duchy of Milan
Chapter Five - Class, Food, Paintings, Health
Conclusion - The “Problem” with Beuckelaer
Bibliography
List of Illustrations
Index

Claudia Goldstein

Beuckelaer and the Art of Dining

Northern Painting, Food, and Social Class in Early Modern Italy

Sixteenth-century Flemish painter Joachim Beuckelaer produced dozens of large-scale paintings of contemporary working women and men selling, presenting, and preparing a visually stunning array of foodstuffs for the viewer. These were new subjects in Antwerp and even newer in Italy, where elite merchants and nobles like Margaret of Parma displayed them as they were meant to be displayed: in dining rooms and spaces used for entertaining. This study explores the cross-cultural meanings of Beuckelaer’s distinctly Northern European kitchen and market scenes in the context of North Italian dining and food culture.
Examining the functions of Beuckelaer’s strange and new subject matter, Goldstein situates his paintings and those of his closest Italian follower, Vincenzo Campi, in the physical space of the dining room, addressing dining practice and the class and gender tensions inherent in a setting that placed both elite and non-elite viewers before life-sized renderings of their employees, and themselves.
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Author

Claudia Goldstein

Claudia Goldstein is Professor of Art History at William Paterson University in Wayne, New Jersey, USA. She holds an MA in Italian Renaissance Art from Syracuse University’s Florence Program and a PhD in Northern Renaissance Art from Columbia. Her first book, Pieter Bruegel and the Culture of the Early Modern Dinner Party, won the Joop Witteveen Prize from the University of Amsterdam in 2014.