Memory and modernity: the functions of architectural adaptability in the fifteenth and sixteenth-century Iberian Peninsula
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2024
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Springer
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Chicote Pompanin, M. T., & Feliciano, M. J. (2024). Memory and modernity: The functions of architectural adaptability in the fifteenth- and sixteenth-century Iberian Peninsula. Postmedieval, 15(4), 1157-1191. https://doi.org/10.1057/S41280-024-00352-Z
Abstract
Resumen: Este artículo fue publicado en Postmedieval (Springer, Q2; H-Index 15, SJR 0,135), una prestigiosa revista que difunde «investigaciones de vanguardia sobre la premodernidad y sus continuas reverberaciones». El trabajo demuestra que los usos y reutilizaciones de los techos de madera decorados son representativos de los mundos artísticos que se desarrollaron en Castilla y Aragón durante los periodos bajomedieval y altomoderno. Esta contribución pretende destacar los patrones de intención y uso que emergen de las diversas prácticas de consumo y exhibición de estas obras. Asimismo, ofrece una selección de materiales comparativos con los que contextualizar los entornos artísticos y sociales que definieron la elección de techumbres para los palacios de Torrijos y Ocaña por parte de Gutierre de Cárdenas y Teresa Enríquez.
Abstract: The uses and reuses of decorative wooden ceilings are representative of the artistic worlds that developed in Castile and Aragon in the late medieval and early modern periods. This contribution seeks to highlight the patterns of intention and use that emerge from the varied practices of consumption and display of these works. It also offers a selection of comparative material with which to contextualise the artistic and social environments that defined Gutierre de Cárdenas (d. 1503) and Teresa Enríquez’s (d. 1529) choice of carpentry ceilings for their palaces in Torrijos and Ocaña.
Abstract: The uses and reuses of decorative wooden ceilings are representative of the artistic worlds that developed in Castile and Aragon in the late medieval and early modern periods. This contribution seeks to highlight the patterns of intention and use that emerge from the varied practices of consumption and display of these works. It also offers a selection of comparative material with which to contextualise the artistic and social environments that defined Gutierre de Cárdenas (d. 1503) and Teresa Enríquez’s (d. 1529) choice of carpentry ceilings for their palaces in Torrijos and Ocaña.










