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An Artful Relic

The Shroud of Turin in Baroque Italy
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In 1578, a fourteen-foot linen sheet bearing faint bloodstained imprints was presented to tens of thousands of worshippers in Turin, Italy, as one of the original shrouds used to prepare Jesus Christ's body for entombment. From that year into the next century, the Shroud of Turin emerged as Christianity's preeminent religious artifact. In an unprecedented new look, Andrew R. Casper sheds light on the origins of one of the world's most famous and controversial religious objects. Since the early twentieth century, scores of scientists and forensic investigators have attributed the Shroud's mysterious image to painterly, natural, or even supernatural forces. Casper, however, shows that this modern opposition of artifice and authenticity does not align with the cloth's historical conception as an object of religious devotion. Examining the period of the Shroud's most enthusiastic following, from the late 1500s through the 1600s, he reveals how it came to be considered as an artful relic-a divine painting attributed to God's artistry that contains traces of Christ's body. Through probing analyses of materials created to perpetuate the Shroud's cult following-including devotional, historical, and theological treatises as well as printed and painted reproductions-Casper uncovers historicized connections to late Renaissance and Baroque artistic cultures that frame an understanding of the Shroud's bloodied corporeal impressions as an alloy of material authenticity and divine artifice. This groundbreaking book introduces rich, new material about the Shroud's emergence as a sacred artifact. It will appeal to art historians specializing in religious and material studies, historians of religion, and to general readers interested in the Shroud of Turin.
Andrew R. Casper is Associate Professor of Art History at Miami University. He is the author of Art and the Religious Image in El Greco's Italy, also published by Penn State University Press.
"The Shroud of Turin is engaging and original. Casper's careful reading of visual and textual sources, as well as his integration of secondary sources on related topics, develops an important new way of considering the Shroud of Turin and its interpretation and devotional context in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries." -Kirstin Noreen, Loyola Marymount University
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