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List of Illustrations
Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction, “Things Change”, Wendy Bellion, University of
Delaware, USA; Kristel Smentek, MIT, USA
1. ‘A Sort of Picture or Image of my Self’: Amoy Chinqua’s Almost
Ancestral Portrait of Joseph Collet, Winnie Wong, University of
California, Berkeley, USA
2. Shooting for Freedom: Examining the Material World of
Self-Emancipated Persons, Tiffany Momon, Sewanee: The University of
the South, USA
3. Something Old, Something New: Repurposing and the Production of
Ephemeral Festival Architecture in 18th-Century Paris, Matthew Gin,
University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA
4. Botanical Fantasy in Silk: Transformations of A Rococo Floral
Design from England to China, Mei Mei Rado, Bard Graduate Center,
USA
5. Making Marble Edible: Madame de Pompadour, Friendship, and the
Multiple Lives of Porcelain, Susan M. Wager, University of New
Hampshire, Durham, USA
6. The Sovereign Betel in Eighteenth-Century Bengal and Bihar,
Zirwat Chowdhury, University of California, Los Angeles, USA
7. Isaiah Thomas’s Stamp Acts at the Halifax Gazette: Printers and
Tacit Protest in Revolutionary America, Jennifer Y. Chuong,
University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign, USA
8. Between Art and Nature: The Dauphin’s Treasure at the Royal
Cabinet of Natural History in Madrid, Tara Zanardi, Hunter College,
CUNY, USA
9. California Indian Basket Weavers, Spanish Imperialism, and
Eighteenth-Century Global Networks, Yve Chavez, University of
Oklahoma, USA
10. British Prints between Caricature and Ethnography, Douglas
Fordham, University of Virginia, USA
Index
Material Cultures of the Global 18th Century collects ground-breaking essays by a diverse roster of art historians to showcase innovative research on understudied objects that illuminate the global material worlds of eighteenth-century art.
Wendy Bellion is Sewell C. Biggs Chair in American Art History
and Associate Dean for the Humanities at the University of
Delaware, USA. Her research focuses on North American art and the
Atlantic World in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. She is
the author of Citizen Spectator: Art, Illusion, and Visual
Perception in Early National America (2011) and Iconoclasm in New
York: Revolution to Reenactment (2019).
Kristel Smentek is Associate Professor of Art History in the
Department of Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, USA. Her research engages eighteenth-century European
graphic and decorative arts in their transcultural contexts. She is
the author of Mariette and the Science of the Connoisseur in
Eighteenth-Century Europe (2014), co-editor of Dare to Know: Prints
and Drawings in the Age of Enlightenment (2022), and co-curator of
the accompanying exhibition at the Harvard Art Museums.
With ten vibrant studies that treat a striking array of media
across an ambitious geographic scope, this volume charts some of
the liveliest directions in today’s eighteenth-century art history,
which has decisively embraced the everyday object and the dynamism
of change as a generative critical lens.
*Nancy Um, Associate Director for Research and Knowledge Creation,
Getty Research Institute, USA*
A new history of eighteenth-century art is being written in books
like Material Cultures of the Global Eighteenth Century. Ten highly
original, meticulously researched, and conceptually exciting essays
encourage us to think expansively about material culture’s role in
shaping global history.
*Stacey Sloboda, Paul H. Tucker Professor of Art History,
University of Massachusetts Boston, USA*
This important volume puts material culture and its protean
meaning-making at the center of eighteenth-century art history.
Bellion's and Smentek's lucid introduction, and the innovative
scholars they bring into conversation, are united by their
admirable attentiveness to objects and voices from around the
globe.
*Amy Freund, Associate Professor and The Kleinheinz Family Endowed
Chair in Art History, Southern Methodist University, USA*
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