Entangled Identities: Textiles and the Art and Architecture of the Apennine Peninsula in a Trans-Mediterranean Perspective
Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Article in conference proceedings › Research › peer-review
Standard
The Hidden Life of Textiles in the Medieval and Early Modern Mediterranean: Contexts and Cross-Cultural Encounters in the Islamic, Latinate and Eastern Christian Worlds. ed. / Nikolaos Vryzidis. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2020. p. 119–154.
Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Article in conference proceedings › Research › peer-review
Harvard
APA
Vancouver
Bibtex
}
RIS
TY - CHAP
T1 - Entangled Identities
T2 - Textiles and the Art and Architecture of the Apennine Peninsula in a Trans-Mediterranean Perspective
AU - Schulz, Vera-Simone
PY - 2020/7/3
Y1 - 2020/7/3
N2 - When the Portuguese sea captain and explorer of the Kingdom of Congo Duarte Pacheco Pareira (ca. 1460-1533) aimed at praising the high quality of local raffia fabrics, he chose to compare them with luxury textiles from Venice. He even claimed that the finesse of the Congolese material made from the fibres of palm trees rivalled that of Venetian velvets. His comparison was no coincidence. By the 16th century, the textile production on the Italian Peninsula had indeed become one of the most renowned in the Mediterranean and beyond. Production centres such as Venice, Genoa, and Florence flourished, and their names had become synonymous with the high quality textiles manufactured there. This paper seeks to examine the pre-history of this moment in time. It will trace the rise of the local silk production on the Italian Peninsula, particularly in the 13th and 14th centuries, when Italian weavers took inspiration from fabrics imported from regions as far as Central Asia and China. They responded creatively to the materiality, techniques, and ornamentation of these foreign textiles, both ‘copying’ and adapting as well as transforming them. During these formative years the textile production on the Italian Peninsula became increasingly part of a wider Mediterranean network, transgressing both media and geographical spaces. This study seeks to question and to investigate how during this development identities were shaped and defined through the textile medium in a context of cross-cultural dynamics and multi-layered processes of artistic transfer.
AB - When the Portuguese sea captain and explorer of the Kingdom of Congo Duarte Pacheco Pareira (ca. 1460-1533) aimed at praising the high quality of local raffia fabrics, he chose to compare them with luxury textiles from Venice. He even claimed that the finesse of the Congolese material made from the fibres of palm trees rivalled that of Venetian velvets. His comparison was no coincidence. By the 16th century, the textile production on the Italian Peninsula had indeed become one of the most renowned in the Mediterranean and beyond. Production centres such as Venice, Genoa, and Florence flourished, and their names had become synonymous with the high quality textiles manufactured there. This paper seeks to examine the pre-history of this moment in time. It will trace the rise of the local silk production on the Italian Peninsula, particularly in the 13th and 14th centuries, when Italian weavers took inspiration from fabrics imported from regions as far as Central Asia and China. They responded creatively to the materiality, techniques, and ornamentation of these foreign textiles, both ‘copying’ and adapting as well as transforming them. During these formative years the textile production on the Italian Peninsula became increasingly part of a wider Mediterranean network, transgressing both media and geographical spaces. This study seeks to question and to investigate how during this development identities were shaped and defined through the textile medium in a context of cross-cultural dynamics and multi-layered processes of artistic transfer.
KW - Science of art
U2 - 10.1484/M.MPMAS-EB.5.120556
DO - 10.1484/M.MPMAS-EB.5.120556
M3 - Article in conference proceedings
SN - 978-2-503-58773-8
SP - 119
EP - 154
BT - The Hidden Life of Textiles in the Medieval and Early Modern Mediterranean
A2 - Vryzidis, Nikolaos
PB - Brepols Publishers
CY - Turnhout
ER -