Brendan C. McMahon is Assistant Professor of History of Art at the University of Michigan.
Description
"In this imaginative study, McMahon shows how the dazzling but fleeting visual effects of iridescent materials prompted reflection on truth and deceit in the early modern Spanish world. Readers will find themselves looking at feathers, seashells, and swaths of shot silk in new and revelatory ways." -Michael J. Schreffler, author of Cuzco: Incas, Spaniards, and the Making of a Colonial City "Brendan McMahon's elegant and entirely original book reveals the ubiquity of iridescent objects-such as shimmering silks and feathers, which appear to shift color-in early modern collections. However, McMahon shows that these materials were also everywhere in period writings, used as potent metaphors about the deceitfulness of art and the unreliability of the senses. Around the motif of iridescence, the author builds a rich and innovative interpretive framework for understanding some of the period's most pressing concerns about what and how humans see." -Adam Jasienski, author of Praying to Portraits: Audience, Identity, and the Inquisition in the Early Modern Hispanic World