Objects that move: Japanese Namban screens in the realm of the senses


Autoria(s): Cox, Rupert
Data(s)

07/03/2016

07/03/2016

2011

Resumo

This paper identifies and critiques the value of stillness as a necessary condition for the display and appreciation of art objects like the 16th century Japanese Namban screens, whose history and function is characterised by forms of movement. Drawing on multi-sited fieldwork in museum galleries that display these screens in Japan, Portugal and North America I will detail how the art-historical interpretation of the physical passage of these objects and their value as cultural heritage is based upon the fixed point perspectivism of networks and a visualist paradigm. Museum focused processes of conservation and display can be understood as extending this paradigm. By means of environmental controls, directed towards the location of perceptible meaning in what is available to vision and the necessary attenuation of the other senses the material movements of the object and movements of constituent materials in the object are stilled. The argument is for a sensory approach to museums and the objects within them, which in this case takes account of the material movements of the screens by engaging the senses through the ‘touch of sound’ as well as vision.

Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT), Fundação Millennium bcp, Ministério da Cultura, Instituto dos Museus e da Conservação

Identificador

Cox, Rupert, "Objects that move: Japanese Namban screens in the realm of the senses", in Revista de História da Arte, n.º 8 (2011), pp. 127-137

1646-1762

http://hdl.handle.net/10362/16682

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Instituto de História da Arte - Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas/UNL

Direitos

openAccess

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Palavras-Chave #Namban art #Materiality #Visualism #Heritage #Sensory anthropology #Paper #Museus
Tipo

article