Intermediality, figurability, iconotext, visual exegesis: these are some of the many new ways in which the relationship between text and image has been explored in recent decades. Scholars have benefited from theoretical work in the fields of anthropology, psychoanalysis, and semiotics, alongside more traditional fields such as literature, art history and cultural history. Focusing on religious texts and images between 1400 and 1700, the essays gathered in this volume contribute to these developments by grounding their case studies in methodology. In considering various relations between the visual and the verbal, the editors have adopted the broadest position possible, emphasizing the phenomenological point of view from which the objects under discussion are examined.
Ingrid Falque is Research Associate with the Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique (Belgium) and Professor of History of Medieval Art at the UCLouvain. She is also co-director of the Centre for Early Modern Cultural Analysis (GEMCA, UCLouvain) and member of the Royal Academy of Archaeology of Belgium. Her research focuses on the history, theories and practices of images, the relationships between art and spirituality and the attitudes towards devotional imagery, and visual experience in Northern Europe during the late Middle Ages. She published several articles and edited volumes on these topics. Her book Devotional Portraiture and Spiritual Experience in Early Netherlandish Painting has been published by Brill in 2019.
5 Sese oblectari in dies: Tropes of Materiality and Artisanship in the Paradisus precum selectarum (1610) of the Cistercian Sub-prior Martin Boschman
âWalter S. Melion
6 âHidden Sonsâ, Baptism, and Vernacular Mysticism in Rogier van der Weydenâs St. John Triptych
âElliott D. Wise
7 The Art of Observance. Jan Provoostâs Diptych of a Franciscan Friar as an Exponent of the Spirituality and Position of the Franciscan Order in the Low Countries, c.1520
âAnna DlabaÄová
8 Jan Brueghel the Elderâs First Paradise Landscape (1594)
âPaul J. Smith
All those interested in text-image studies, particularly in the religious field of the late Middle Ages and the early modern period, as well as those interested in methodological and theoretical reflection in the humanities. Keywords: intermediality, spiritual literature, devotional imagery, meditation, image theory, visual exegesis, Northern Europe, iconotext, cultural analysis, engravings, paintings, emblems, illuminated manuscripts, illustrated books.