Detailed Information on Publication Record
2024
De l’objet au corps : la culture matérielle et visuelle « mobile » dans l’initiation chrétienne (IVe-VIe s.)
FOLETTI, IvanBasic information
Original name
De l’objet au corps : la culture matérielle et visuelle « mobile » dans l’initiation chrétienne (IVe-VIe s.)
Name (in English)
From object to body: "mobile" material and visual culture in Christian initiation (4th-6th centuries)
Authors
FOLETTI, Ivan (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution)
Edition
Milano, Bapteme et baptisteres entre Antiquité tardive et Moyen Age, p. 160-177, 18 pp. Bibliotheque d'histoire de l'art et de l'archéologie, 2024
Publisher
Silvana Editoriale
Other information
Language
French
Type of outcome
Kapitola resp. kapitoly v odborné knize
Field of Study
60401 Arts, Art history
Country of publisher
Italy
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Publication form
printed version "print"
References:
Organization unit
Faculty of Arts
ISBN
978-88-366-4999-0
Keywords in English
Christian initiation; Image and liturgy; Objects and images; repetition of visual concepts
Změněno: 8/4/2024 17:42, prof. Ivan Foletti, MA, Docteur es Lettres, Docent in Church History
V originále
This articles is structured as follows: the first part will be dedicated to a reflection on the fundamental images that appear in initiatory spaces, and how they participate in the synaesthetic experience of Christian places. In the second part, a number of case studies will be presented. The focus will be on objects bearing images that lie at the heart of the initiatory mystery. Particular, but not exclusive, attention will be paid to the representation of the Holy Women at the Tomb, an early witness to Christ's Resurrection, and to the Wedding at Cana, an event that introduces the Gospel miracle narratives, but is also intrinsically linked to the initiatory rhetoric of the Church Fathers.
In English
This articles is structured as follows: the first part will be dedicated to a reflection on the fundamental images that appear in initiatory spaces, and how they participate in the synaesthetic experience of Christian places. In the second part, a number of case studies will be presented. The focus will be on objects bearing images that lie at the heart of the initiatory mystery. Particular, but not exclusive, attention will be paid to the representation of the Holy Women at the Tomb, an early witness to Christ's Resurrection, and to the Wedding at Cana, an event that introduces the Gospel miracle narratives, but is also intrinsically linked to the initiatory rhetoric of the Church Fathers.