Blood, Milk, Ink, Gold

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2006-01-02
Publisher(s): Univ of Chicago Pr
List Price: $55.00

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Summary

Most people would be hard pressed to name a famous artist from Renaissance France. Yet sixteenth-century French kings believed they were the heirs of imperial Rome and commissioned a magnificent array of visual arts to secure their hopes of political ascendancy with images of overflowing abundance. With a wide-ranging yet richly detailed interdisciplinary approach, Rebecca Zorach examines the visual culture of the French Renaissance, where depictions of sacrifice, luxury, fertility, violence, metamorphosis, and sexual excess are central. Zorach looks at the cultural, political, and individual roles that played out in these artistic themes and how, eventually, these aesthetics of exuberant abundance disintegrated amidst perceptions of decadent excess. Throughout the book, abundance and excess flow in liquids-blood, milk, ink, and gold-that highlight the materiality of objects and the human body, and explore the value (and values) accorded to them. The arts of the lavish royal court at Fontainebleau and in urban centers are here explored in a vibrant tableau that illuminates our own contemporary relationship to excess and desire. From marvelous works by Francois Clouet to oversexed ornamental prints to Benvenuto Cellini's golden saltcellar fashioned for Francis I, Blood, Milk, Ink, Gold covers an astounding range of subjects with precision and panache, producing the most lucid, well-rounded portrait of the cultural politics of the French Renaissance to date.

Author Biography

Rebecca Zorach is assistant professor of art history at the University of Chicago. She is coeditor of Embodied Utopias.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
ix
Preface: Figures of Excess xiii
Incomprehensible Abundance? An Introduction
1(32)
Blood
33(50)
Sacrifice and Generation at Fontainebleau
33(5)
The Galerie Francois Premier
38(5)
Iconology
43(5)
Fontainebleau Nova Pandora
48(5)
Death and Rebirth
53(6)
The Death of Adonis
59(7)
The Aesthetics of Sacrifice
66(11)
Impossible Bodies
77(6)
Milk
83(52)
Visual Rhetorics
83(5)
Nature/France
88(2)
Cybele and Artemis
90(13)
Fertile Gaul's Fat Breasts
103(4)
Charles and Elizabeth
107(13)
The Lust of the Earth
120(6)
Natural Antiquity
126(9)
Ink
135(54)
Goods, Design, Desire
135(5)
Ornament and the ``School of Fontainebleau''
140(18)
Copia and Curiosity
158(6)
The Golden Fleece
164(13)
Inammate Reproduction
177(7)
Problems of Number
184(5)
Gold
189(48)
The Other Side of Increase
189(1)
Living Gold
190(6)
Mutability
196(7)
Royal Responses
203(5)
The New World
208(4)
Inflation and the Hubris of Kings
212(2)
The Golden Age
214(6)
Circe's Golden Rod
220(6)
Counterfeit Bodies
226(11)
Epilogue: Animation and De-animation 237(8)
Notes 245(42)
Bibliography 287(18)
Index 305

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