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Objects and Spaces of Encounter in Renaissance Italy

Lead Research Organisation: University of Cambridge
Department Name: History

Abstract

This project for the first time places foreigners, migrants and minority groups at the centre of the long Renaissance in Italy. It explores the complex ties and interdependencies supporting cultural production in this period, unsettling long-held assumptions about what was 'Italian' about the 'Italian Renaissance'. Moving beyond the study of specific minorities (e.g. Jews, Greeks, Black Africans), it investigates the fundamental diversity and connectedness of Italian society and culture.

Our research holds that every aspect of the Italian Renaissance resulted from an encounter, and that within each encounter, every actor possessed a varying level of 'belonging' and conversely of 'extraneity' (Cerutti, 2012). This conceptual model allows us, first, to recognize the contribution of foreigners, migrants, and minority groups to Renaissance cultural production; second, to identify these contributions as fundamental to the social fabric of Italy, where 'the diversity of urban populations was hard-wired into the lives of whole regions' (Rubin, 2020); and third, to integrate those contributions into wider patterns of cultural exchange and production across the peninsula.

We focus on objects and spaces which reveal the influence of foreign actors, materials, designs and production techniques on the culture of the Renaissance. Objects (such as Turkish rugs, German bedclothes or garments made of 'damask' or 'scotch tweed'), contextualised using archival, textual and visual sources, evoke material exchanges, sociability, and the layering of real and imagined interactions. Spaces of encounter (workshops, inns, fairs, churches) frame the human and material contacts underpinning the Renaissance and allow us to assess levels of extraneity and belonging, as they varied by circumstance and place.

Our project guards against the conventional skewing of Italian history towards Venice, Florence and Rome with fresh research on less-studied coastal and frontier regions of southern, central and northern Italy. The timeframe, 1450-1650, covers a period of exceptional mobility, resulting from the persecution of Jews and Muslims in the Spanish kingdoms, the slave trade, the Reformations, religious wars and shifting European-Ottoman relations.

We expect this new history of the Renaissance to be unfamiliar, unsettling and uncomfortable. It engages with structures of inequality and discrimination inherent to Renaissance Italy while teasing out the potential for intercultural collaboration and innovation within that hostile, prejudiced world. By revealing the creative consequences of migration and multiculturalism, we challenge one of the key myths of 'western civilization'.

Our work thus presents a new critical approach to the Italian Renaissance. The field, long defined as the study of the intellectual and artistic output of humanist scholars and elite artists, has faced recent accusations of irrelevance and narrow elitism. We argue, by contrast, that the astonishing cultural production of the period was neither narrow nor elite, but germinated in its very encounters and interdependence with richly diverse networks of minority groups.

The project is timely. It answers a pressing need to demonstrate the diversity and connectedness of pre-modern communities and to recast European history in the light of Brexit, BLM, and the decolonization of the curriculum. It also deploys innovative historical methods to challenge old assumptions about national identity and the nature of creativity. In a famed costume book of 1590, Cesare Vecellio attributed the dazzling array of clothes in Italy to its defining mix of peoples: 'For this reason, it is no wonder that we can see a greater diversity of dress here than in any other major nation or region.' By studying the fecundity of encounters, we aspire to paint an alternative picture of the Renaissance in Italy, enriched by minorities, migrants and outsiders.

Publications

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Title Scottish Objects of Encounter - Project Exhibit at the Wardlaw Museum, University of St Andrews 
Description An exhibit that seeks to amplify our understanding of what constitutes Scottishness, both now and when the university was founded. We aim to show how national identity is formed and strengthened - not only by birth, but by people, spaces, objects, materials, techniques, and meanings. At the time of the University's founding, all of Scotland, especially its first university, participated in the flow of ideas, techniques, people, and material across Europe and the world, as they do today. As a result, both then and now, the idea of being Scottish always reflects hidden diversities and encounters. Scottishness has never been monochromatic. Understanding this history enhances our sense of the university's distinct identity and community, formed by centuries of encounter. Our exhibit tells this story by spotlighting the hidden diversity of two of its most iconic Scottish objects: the St Salvator's Mace and the Six Centuries Mace, reflecting six centuries of openness to the world. Among our main exhibits was a 3D-printed replica of the St. Salvator mace, designed for visitors to handle, along with a film featuring an interview with Panos Kirkos, master silversmith of the Six Centuries mace, and his son Paul. In the main exhibition room, as well as in other parts of the museum, we also provided iPads with a digital extension of our exhibit, allowing visitors to learn more about Scottish objects of encounter. 
Type Of Art Artistic/Creative Exhibition 
Year Produced 2024 
Impact The exhibition had a remarkable impact, both on the local community and on the large body of students and academics of the University. We relied on different types of feedback to measure the impact of the exhibition. We provided paper slips with questions, asking: "When it comes to Scottishness, what comes to mind first?" 1.Land and Government; 2.Culture and Traditions; 3.Symbols and Objects; 4.Other. Additionally, visitors had access to postcards featuring an object from the exhibition on one side and two questions on the other, designed to encourage reflection on the exhibition experience and engagement with its message: "Tell us about a meaningful object of encounter in your life". and "Think about your national identity. What does it involve?"Both responses were to be posted on a grid on the wall, which was periodically checked. By the end of the exhibition, we had collected over a hundred responses. As an additional method to measure impact, we placed boxes for a token-based survey, asking visitors how much the exhibition had changed their opinion about what Scottishness means. The majority of responses indicated that the exhibition had indeed altered visitors' perceptions of Scottishness. 
 
Description Conference: Objects and Spaces of Encounter in Renaissance Italy with L'Istituto Storico Italo-Germanico, Trento (Fondazione Bruno Kessler) 
Organisation Fondazione Bruno Kessler
Country Italy 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution Financial contribution of £1942 to pay for catering and technician.
Collaborator Contribution The ISIG was involved in the project from the earliest stages and contributed intellectual direction. The Institute hosted this conference; staff there served as valuable interlocutors for discussion of the key themes of our project. The ISIG contributed materially to the sum of £2200, including cost of use of facilities and services.
Impact The principal outcome is a vibrant network of scholars working on encounter; together, we are planning two special issues of a journal.
Start Year 2023