Mapping Spaces
Military siege of a city. Paintings from the 17th century.
Networks of Knowledge in the Landscape Art of the 17th Century
Sat, April 12, 2014 – Sun, July 13, 2014

The ZKM throws new light on 17th century landscape painting. Comparable to modern satellite surveying (GPS), true to scale landscape representation is also indebted to the interdisciplinary exchange of knowledge: the alliance of geodesists, mathematicians, instrument makers and painters. Artists had designed modern surveying systems long before new media drew on images from outer space.

The exhibition »Mapping Spaces« examines, for the first time ever on this scale, the influence of early modern guide books in geography, the science of surveying and the construction of fortification on Dutch painting around 1650. The prelude to the project, developed at the University of Trier, is Pieter Snayers‘ large-format depiction of historical battle scenes, in which maps and landscape paintings are projected over one another so as to document the most recent developments in modern engineering, ballistics and the fortification construction.

Over 220 exhibits, among them paintings, surveying instruments, graphics devices, books, maps and globes drawn from the most important collections of works, such as from the Prado (Madrid), the Louvre (Paris), the Rijksmuseum (Amsterdam) or the Kunsthistorischen Museum (Vienna) testify to these new theses in pictorial science. The new mapping of an early modern area of knowledge is accompanied by contemporary works of art that thematize the influence of technological developments on our present-day perception of space.

 

Partners

University Trier [LOGO], Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel [LOGO]

Sponsors

Sponsored by Ernst von Siemens Kunststiftung [LOGO] and Rudolf-August Oetker Stiftung für Kunst, Kultur, Wissenschaft und Denkmalpflege [LOGO]
In the context and with support by the 22nd European Cultur Days 2014 [LOGO]

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Contributors