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Fantasia on a Harpsichord Case: The Allegorische Voorstelling van Amsterdam als Centrum van de Wereldhandel of Pieter Isaacsz
Author(s) -
Chan Eleanor
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
renaissance studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.117
H-Index - 16
eISSN - 1477-4658
pISSN - 0269-1213
DOI - 10.1111/rest.12518
Subject(s) - harpsichord , context (archaeology) , musical , art , period (music) , value (mathematics) , greenwich , representation (politics) , reading (process) , art history , visual arts , history , sociology , literature , politics , aesthetics , linguistics , philosophy , law , computer science , political science , archaeology , machine learning , piano , environmental science , soil science
Lost for many years, the Amsterdam city harpsichord case (alias the Allegorische Voorstelling van Amsterdam ) was ultimately identified in an auction in 1999 by its distinctive representation of the sky. The Allegorische Voorstelling is often taken to depict the successes of the Dutch East India Company, and thus seen predominantly as a colonial work. However, this reading suppresses the context of the case’s creation and the way in which it interacts with both the intellectual and musical culture of its time. It is a musical instrument, not simply a panel painting: it has sonic resonance. In this period, the senses were important cognitive tools. As a result, the sonic context of the Allegorische Voorstelling would have been far more resonant, and far more perceptible, to its original viewers than it is to twenty‐first century viewers. This article seeks to demonstrate the value of examining the Allegorische Voorstelling with full appreciation of what music and hearing meant for cognition reveals a subtler, undercurrent to its territorial statement than first appears.