Thresholds and Boundaries: Liminality in Netherlandish Art (1385-1530)
ISBN: 9781315107998
Platform/Publisher: Taylor & Francis / Routledge
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited



Although liminality has been studied by scholars of medieval and seventeenth-century art, the role of the threshold motif in Netherlandish art of the late fourteenth, fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries -- this late medieval/early 'early modern' period -- has been much less fully investigated.   Thresholds and Boundaries: Liminality in Netherlandish Art (1385-1550)  addresses this issue through a focus on key case studies (Sluter's portal of the Chartreuse de Champmol and the calendar pages of the Limbourg Brothers' Très Riches Heures), and on important formats (altarpieces and illuminated manuscripts).  Lynn F. Jacobs examines how the visual thresholds established within Netherlandish paintings, sculptures, and manuscript illuminations become sites where artists could address relations between life and death, aristocrat and peasant, holy and profane, and man and God--and where artists could exploit the "betwixt and between" nature of the threshold to communicate, paradoxically, both connections and divisions between these different states and different worlds. Building on literary and anthropological interpretations of liminality, this book demonstrates how the exploration of boundaries in Netherlandish art infused the works with greater meaning.  The book's probing of the -- often ignored --meanings of the threshold motif casts new light on key works of Netherlandish art.


Lynn F. Jacobs is Distinguished Professor of Art History at the University of Arkansas.  Her previous publications have included two books --  Early Netherlandish Carved Altarpieces: Medieval Tastes and Mass Marketing  and Opening Doors: The Early Netherlandish Triptych Reinterpreted --  as well as articles in  Art Bulletin ,  The Sixteenth Century Journal ,  Jaarboek Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten Antwerpen ,  Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte  and elsewhere. In 1990 her  Art Bulletin  article was awarded the Arthur Kingsley Porter Prize by the College Art Association.

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