Altered and Adorned: Using Renaissance Prints in Daily Life (Art Institute of Chicago)
Price 30.70 - 35.91 USD
Today Renaissance-era prints are typically preserved behind glass or in solander boxes in museums, but these decorative objects were once a central part of everyday life. Altered and Adorned is a delightful, surprising look at how prints were used:160;affixed on walls; glued into albums, books, and boxes;160;annotated; hand-colored; or cut apart. This handsome volume introduces readers to the experimental world of printmaking in the mid-15th and 16th centuries and the array of objects it inspired, from illustrated books, sewing patterns, and wearable ornaments to printed sundials and anatomical charts. It features many never-before-published treasures from the Art Institute of Chicago"s rich permanent collection, along with essays on the ways prints functioned8212;in some cases as three-dimensional and interactive works8212;and how their condition communicates their use.