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This book is the first full-length study of the Nova Reperta (New
Discoveries), a renowned series of prints designed by Johannes
Stradanus during the late 1580s in Florence. Reproductions of the
prints, essays, conversations from a scholarly symposium, and
catalogue entries complement a Newberry Library exhibition that
tells the story of the design, conception, and reception of
Stradanus's engravings. Renaissance Invention: Stradanus's 'Nova
Reperta' seeks to understand why certain inventions or novelties
were represented in the series and how that presentation reflected
and fostered their adoption in the sixteenth century. What can
Stradanus's prints tell us about invention and cross-cultural
encounter in the Renaissance? What was considered 'new' in the era?
Who created change and technological innovation? Through images of
group activities and interactions in workshops, Stradanus's prints
emphasize the importance of collaboration in the creation of new
things, dispelling traditional notions of individual genius. The
series also dismisses the assumption that the revival of the
wonders of the ancient world in Italy was the catalyst for
transformation. In fact, the Latin captions on the prints explain
how contemporary inventions surpass those of the ancients.
Together, word and image foreground the global nature of invention
and change in the early modern period even as they promote
specifically Florentine interests and activities.
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