Im/Materiality in Renaissance Arts

The inspiration for this Special Issue on Im/Materiality in Renaissance Arts arose from two convictions: (1) that sensual experiences and the physicality of creation must be a part of our accounts of the past, and (2) that crosstalk among scholars of music, literature, art, and architecture can reveal both the historiographical gaps endemic to specific disciplines and the critical tools each specialty brings to the project of incorporating living, breathing artists, builders, poets, singers, players, worshippers, scientists, and others into histories of the Renaissance arts [...]

scores, archival documents).In the end, we realized that our testing of limits was where the limitations of standard historiographies suddenly become most vivid, and we embraced it all the more fully as intrinsic to the Im/Materiality that concerns us.These studies are not "just the facts," and while they may provoke moments of disciplinary vertigo, they also offer new disciplinary footings for scholars eager to step off familiar paths of well-worn thinking.
Making historiographic space for change and uncertainty in our accounts also means including the historian's own processes of encounter with the past, taking stock of how analyses came into being and the pre-history of these deliberately open-ended studies, full of experimental modes of investigation.It is not by chance that so many of our authors are scholar-performers, scholar-creators, scholar-horticulturists, or some otherly hyphenated scholarly being.Bank is a musicologist who "sing[s] a lot" in choirs and for whom the social experience of musicking has always been a central point of reference.Cannady just finished a residency at the Oak Spring Garden Foundation in Upperville, Virginia, working alongside ecologists and gardeners.Chan thanks two ballet dancers, a seamstress, and a joiner in her 2022 book for helping her understand mathematical notation as something "felt in your body and held in your mind's eye" (Chan 2022, p. xiii).Refini trained as a violinist and continues to play chamber music with friends; he now collaborates with opera singers as part of his research.Hara explored curatorial work and art conservation before becoming an art and architectural historian.Similarly, so many period actors also confound our clear-cut modern categories and were engineer-musician-painters (Leonardo), poet-linguist-cardinals (Pietro Bembo), and composer-kings (Henry VIII, Louis XIII), whose physical labors as makers should not be dismissed (on the artist's laboring body, see Loh 2015).
Our editorial partnership is also hyphenated in beautiful ways that contributed to bringing this project into being: van Orden specializes in the cultural history of early modern France, Italy, and the Mediterranean, popular music, print culture, and cultural mobility.
Pon is an art historian interested in Renaissance copia, whose 2015 book examined not only a fifteenth-century woodcut and its copies in paint and print, but the commemorative architecture and civic devotional rituals that arose around it, including a procession for it held in 2014 (Pon 2015).We first met in 2018 in the café of the Harvard Art Museums for a free-wheeling conversation about New Materialism and the techniques employed by musicologists and art historians to address the somatic realities of the past.Lisa asked for practical approaches to thinking about Renaissance polyphony, and Kate suggested learning to play the viola da gamba, an instrument she plays for fun alongside her professional performances on baroque bassoon.Lisa took up the viol in 2019 despite having no prior musical training whatsoever, beyond what she had gleaned during professional ballet training as a teenager.Suffice to say that we both find theory and practice to be deeply intertwined in our own lives.These sympathies inspired the panel we organized for the 2023 Renaissance Society of America conference in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on our issue's theme (which included two papers not presented here, by Florence Gétreau and Morgan Ng).Our co-editing of this Special Issue of Arts has provided a virtual meeting spot for continued conversations about art, music, and history that have been greatly enriched by our collaborations with Bank, Cannady, Chan, Hara, and Refini.
The "Im/Materiality" rubric we arrived at for this Special Issue expresses a shared desire to better address the huge array of invisible, inaudible, missing, lost, and unspeakable elements that have long haunted our own work, the phantom ways of knowing relegated to suggestive footnotes or hinted at in acknowledgements crediting classroom experiments with our students and attempts at historical reconstructions that never claimed to be authentic but nonetheless told us so much about the ways things came together in the past.In our exchanges, we found that we share an analytic process of tacking back and forth between the obdurate objects that now remain and the long-gone, evanescent handling they once inspired.Although we both generally abhor slashes in academic prose, we acknowledge their occasional usefulness, as noted in a recent New York Times review of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Manet/Degas exhibition (Cotter 2023), and here we embrace the slash as emblematic of our scholarly agenda.Typographically, "Im/Materiality" symbolizes a critical tightrope, one from which it is all too easy to fall into pre-determined ways of thinking.Even as the slash trips us up, the multiple readings of this word/these words are also held together by a slash that charts the potential benefits of walking a line amid and between the Material and its negation with "Im."The slashing effect is intended to be deliberately and positively disturbing by disrupting a seamless reading of "immaterial" and confusing any straightforward approach to "material" that might allow it to be separated from actions and being.
Some of these beneficial disturbances are built into the disciplinary encounters staged in this issue; from the start, we found ourselves comparing the research methods specific to musicology and art history, and the predispositions of our individual disciplines to repress or evade somatic knowledge.In the case of early musicology, which established itself as a science based on textual study, iconography, and organology, the relevance of performance was always limited, and scholars concentrated on studying material remains (manuscripts, printed books, paintings, and instruments).Indeed, bibliography, paleography, philology, textual criticism, editing, and archival research are foundational to the discipline.Accounts of past performers occasionally hovered around life-and-works studies of composers such as Georg Friederich Händel, who often wrote operatic roles with specific singers in mind, while interest in historical performance practice established a research area in which organology, fabrication, and interpretation led to real-time experiments designed to bring us closer to the sound of things in the past.But on the whole, as Carolyn Abbate observed in 2004, "musical performance has been seen, analyzed, and acknowledged, but not always listened to" (Abbate 2004, p. 508).
Literary historians will recognize these same tendencies to focus on the text and the conundrums they pose for historians of early modern theater.For-as with music, where we can safely assert that notated texts are not the music itself-playbooks are not plays (Orgel 1996, p. 23;Wistreich 2011, pp. 230-33).The same applies to dance: choreographic instructions are not dance (Franko and van Orden 2019).And yet, the magnetism of texts distracts us from dwelling as fully as we might (and should) in sound, sight, touch, smell, proprioception, and taste.We might also want to preserve space for past imaginings, visualizations, and visions.As Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht explained in Production of Presence: Interpretation alone cannot do justice to the dimension of 'presence,' a dimension in which cultural phenomena and cultural events become tangible and have an impact on our senses and our bodies.(Gumbrecht 2004, cover description) Gumbrecht's emphasis on presence evokes Susan Sontag's call for "an erotics of art": "What we need now is to recover our senses.We must learn to see more, to hear more, to feel more" (Sontag 1966, p. 14).Honoring presence through renewed sensibilities in our research seems all the more urgent in our current historical moment.It demands a willingness to hold aside the material text or score long enough to sense, analyze, and describe such dynamic visceral reactions should we want to integrate them into our research.
This turn to the sensorium is especially challenging for art history, particularly when studying the Renaissance (though studies of contemporary art have been more nimble; see, for example, (Jones 2008).Art history has deep roots in museums and auction houses, where art objects have ostensibly been kept for posterity or changed hands in frankly economic transactions.These institutional settings developed practices of connoisseurial discernment and cataloging, and of assessing condition and value that focused on and often isolated the material object.In the twentieth century, museums literally became machines for maintaining at proper temperature and humidity their chosen "objects of care," while in our own century, the limits of such care, given war and climate change, are becoming ever more apparent (Marshall 2023; see also Domínguez Rubio 2020, pp. 50-52).Art history in the academy has also always had text-based forms of interpretation, whether the texts in question come from historical archives or from critical theory.How to bring together cared-for art objects, the specter of material things beyond our care, and texts (including ours!) that would speak for wordless pictures and music?How to consider the artworlds of early modern artists and composers, as well as the horizons of five centuries of viewing and playing?
In recent decades, Renaissance art history has begun to address these issues.In a 2001 collaboration with Graham Larkin, Lisa offered some initial responses by calling for a "sociology of images," an expansive field of art historical interpretation that, even if unable to fully recapture Gumbrechtian "presence," might embrace the spatial, technical, ritual, and institutional framings of any work of art, as well as its materiality (Pon and Larkin 2001, pp. 1-6;Pon 2015, pp. 1-10).No work of art is permanently fixed, no matter how well-controlled its physical environment.Just as manuscript annotations in an early printed book might literally have been washed away to make a clean copy, additions to a finished work that might have been removed as overpainting a generation ago are now studied for their own cultural significance (Stoddard 1985;Jasienski 2023).
Early modern books and paintings-along with the textiles, prints, trees, and sculptures our authors bring together in this issue-may seem to be unyielding material objects.Yet they are not.Like more obviously durational art forms such as music, dance, theater, and literature, experiences of such things unfold in time, an unfolding that can be witnessed in many media by patient historians (Abramson 2016;Hinterwaldner et al. 2016).We advocate for this kind of unhurried sensitivity, for using all our senses while grounded in careful attention to and robust description of the soundless, invisible reverberations a material object may trigger.In this Special Issue of Arts, for instance, Katie Bank actively imagines the sensual experiences of party guests arriving at Knole House, Kent, in the early seventeenth century: as they ascended the Great Staircase, they would have been treated to galliards from the musicians' galleries overhead, light streaming in from picture windows or shadows cast by candelabras, perfumes and scents of the banquet wafting down from the Great Hall above, and perhaps met with the temptation to reach out and touch the sculpture of the Sackville Leopard on the landing (contribution 1).Attention to these experiences would have been incited by the paintings of the Five Senses in the staircase, which Bank interprets as prescriptive cues for past party goers as well as remnants of past sensualities, whose meanings, hierarchies, and interactions have been opened for study by present-day historians.Mari Yoko Hara explores how early modern "situated viewers" in the Villa Farnesina in Rome might have felt when looking at paintings of Medusa, given the ubiquitous theme of petrification in poetry they would have known.Within the partly enclosed space of a loggia overlooking a garden and gazing upwards at a ceiling fresco depicting the starry sky, they would already be attuned to processes of material transformation (contribution 4).Eugenio Refini honors the interpretive insights of modern-day stage directors Jean-Pierre Ponnelle and Paul Agnew, whose gendered choices of voice type for Echo and decisions about whether echo effects should be seen or just heard are highly revealing of the interaction of Im/Materiality at stake in early modern poems and operas based on Ovid's Metamorphosis (contribution 5).By concentrating on a figure without substance, Refini exemplifies the kind of literary-historical questions that can only be addressed fully through performance studies.Lauren Cannady begins by examining a single black locust tree and then branches out to consider a social network of gardeners, horticulturalists, "physician-professors," merchant adventurers, and successive French kings across two continents (contribution 2).The tree that opens her article grows in Virginia, where she wrote her text.This conscious circling between our present and the pasts we study, between our sensing and our interpreting, turns inward as Eleanor Chan questions the scholarly mandate to make sense of texts in ways that ignore the pleasures of the eye, the delights of typography as a graphic form, and the enticements of text blocks as sheer texture at a time when broadsides were used as wallpaper (contribution 3).As varied as they are in subject and method, each contribution instructs us to remain present, to come to our senses, and to welcome the power of presence into our scholarship.

Conflicts of Interest:
The authors declare no conflict of interest.and campus neighbors exploring scholarship in community.In the 1980s, she danced Balanchine's Concerto Barocco as a member of the corps de ballet of the Garden State Ballet.