Giants and Dwarfs in European Art and Culture, ca. 1350-1750
Title
Giants and Dwarfs in European Art and Culture, ca. 1350-1750
Subtitle
Real, Imagined, Metaphorical
Price
€ 153,00 excl. VAT
ISBN
9789463728850
Format
Hardback
Number of pages
392
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Also available as
eBook PDF - € 152,99
Table of Contents
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List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Giants and Dwarfs as Real, Imagined, and Metaphorical Entities - Robin O’Bryan
PART I NORTHERN CLIMES
1. Out of Scale: Naming and Identity of Late Medieval Giants - Assaf Pinkus
2. St. Christopher the Giant: Imagining the Sublime in Fifteenth-Century South Tyrol - Michal Ozeri
3. Giants as Primordial Ancestors in Sixteenth-Century Art and Poetry - Andrea Bubenik
4. A Champion “large of portratour”: Robert the Bruce as “Giant” in Anti-Tudor Propaganda - Giovanna Guidicini
5. Giants and Dwarfs in the Tyrolean Courts: Documents, Portraits, and the Kunst- und Wunderkammer at Schloss Ambras - Hansjörg Rabanser
6. A Model Christian and “Child of God”: A German Court Dwarf and His Funeral Sermon - Eva Seemann
PART II SPAIN AND ITALY
7. Ordinary Marvels: The Case of Dwarf Attendants in Habsburg Spain - Janet Ravenscroft
8. A Ducal Dwarf, Military Prowess, and a Portrait in the Farnese Dynastic Collection - Robin O’Bryan
9. “Per mano della Maria Nana”: A Female Dwarf in the Retinue of Eleonora di Toledo - Sarah McBryde
10. Dwarfs and Giants in Early Modern Caricature -Sandra Cheng
11. “Biancone”: Giants, Dwarfs, and the Rise of a Popular Nickname - Felicia Else
Index

Robin O'Bryan, Felicia Else (eds)

Giants and Dwarfs in European Art and Culture, ca. 1350-1750

Real, Imagined, Metaphorical

Not since Edward Wood’s Giants and Dwarfs published in 1868 has the subject been the focus of a scholarly study in English. Treating the topic afresh, this volume offers new insights into the vogue for giants and dwarfs that flourished in late-medieval and early modern Europe. From chapters dealing with the real dwarfs and giants in the royal and princely courts, to the imaginary giants and dwarfs that figured in the crafting of nationalistic and ancestral traditions, to giants and dwarfs used as metaphorical expression, scholars discuss their role in art, literature, and ephemeral display. Some essays examine giants and dwarfs as monsters and marvels and collectibles, while others show artists and writers emphasizing contrasts in scale to inspire awe or for comic effect. As these investigations reveal, not all court dwarfs functioned as jesters, and giant figures might equally be used to represent heroes, anti-heroes, and even a saint.
Editors

Robin O'Bryan

Robin O’Bryan (PhD) is an Art Historian focusing on issues related to popular culture in Italian Renaissance art, especially dwarfs. Her published articles have appeared in journals and anthologies including Games and Game Playing in Early Modern Art and Literature which she also edited for Amsterdam University Press.

Felicia Else

Felicia M. Else is Professor of Art History at Gettysburg College in Pennsylvania. She has published on art, water, cartography, natural history, and festivals in 16th-century Florence and is the author of The Politics of Water in the Art and Festivals of Medici Florence: From Neptune Fountain to Naumachia.