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Innovation, technology, and spectacle combine in wondrous works of
decorative art and furniture that embody the splendor and luxury of
the royal courts of Europe At once beautiful works of art and
technological wonders, the objects featured in Making Marvels
demonstrate how European royalty from the Renaissance to the
Enlightenment signaled their status through their collections of
ingeniously crafted inventions. Featuring 150 exemplary objects
ranging from mechanical toys to scientific instruments, timepieces
to automata, this groundbreaking study brings to life a glorious
period when luxury, a quest for knowledge, scientific invention,
and political power combined to produce remarkable works of art.
More than frivolous playthings, these works inspired technical
innovations that influenced a broad spectrum of activities,
including astronomy, engineering, and artisanal craftsmanship. This
remarkable volume explores works in a wide range of materials,
including precious metals, gemstones, pietra dura, marble, ivory,
wood, bone, shell, glass, and paper. The book's compelling essays
address the layered historical context in which these objects were
fashioned and gathered into cabinets of wonder at courts throughout
Europe; elucidate their complex blending of art and science; and
provide fascinating details about the patrons who commissioned them
and the specialists who made them. Published by The Metropolitan
Museum of Art/Distributed by Yale University Press Exhibition
Schedule: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (November 25,
2019-March 1, 2020)
The Kunstkammer in Dresden's Royal Palace houses a fascinating
variety of collected objects from the late Renaissance and early
Baroque periods. It owes its unique collection of plain and ornate
tools, for example, to the founder of the Kunstkammer, Elector
August (1526-1586). They range from gardening equipment to
goldsmithing, carpentry and ironworking tools and even to so-called
Brechzeugen (tools for prising or breaking things open). In
addition, the museum guide presents elaborately decorated art-room
cabinets, two richly embellished Augsburg cabinets, tables inlaid
with iridescent mother-of-pearl, precious board games, and musical
instruments alongside filigree woodturned pieces, items of
decorative art, and objects from distant cultures. Numerous
previously unpublished masterpieces from the Kunstkammer in
Dresden's Royal Palace
Der kostbare Juwelenschatz aus dem Grünen Gewölbe hat eine
wechselvolle Vergangenheit. Nur in der Dresdner Schatzkammer haben
barocke Juwelengarnituren die Zeitläufe überstanden - ein ebenso
einzigartiges wie glanzvolles Erbe der europäischen
Kulturgeschichte. Von August dem Starken begonnen und von seinem
Sohn August III. weitergeführt, entstanden zehn Juwelengarnituren,
die seit Anbeginn im Juwelenzimmer des Grünen Gewölbes aufbewahrt
wurden. Sie symbolisieren eindrucksvoll die Majestät der Könige
und sind einmalige Zeugnisse barocker Selbstdarstellung.
The famous "Historisches Grunes Gewoelbe" returns to the
residential palace for the first time after 60 years in September
2006. The beautifully illustrated catalogue takes the reader on a
fascinating tour through this unique "Gesamtkunstwerk". The "Grunes
Gewoelbe" was founded in 1550 by Elector August of Saxony as the
state treasury, "Geheime Verwahrung." Augustus the Strong converted
it into a publicly accessible Schatzkunst museum in 1729. His idea
was unrivalled: the eight display rooms with their exquisite
interiors and the highly impressive mise en scene of the collection
were designed to inspire amazement. The extravagant profusion of
precious objects in gold, silver, enamel and precious stones, the
ivories, bronzes and jewellery proclaimed the wealth and artistic
taste of the Saxon dynasty. In 1942 the collection was closed and
taken into storage at Koenigstein fortress. The museum's exterior
and three of the eight rooms were severely damaged during the war.
From 1974 a part of the collection could be seen again, but it was
not until 2004 when the "Neues Grunes Gewoelbe" was reopened with
exhibits from the Renaissance to Neo-Classicism. The book
introduces the masterpieces of this fascinating collection and
provides an insight into the brilliant concept of the museum's
founder, from which the inspiration for this presentation has been
drawn.
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