Lisbon in the sixteenth century: decoding the Chafariz d’el Rei
An anonymous sixteenth-century painting of the King’s Fountain in the Lisbon Alfama, Chafariz d’el Rei, recently the subject of speculation over its provenance and date, has also been of interest because of its depiction of so many black and white figures together, from all social strata and walks o...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Race & class 2018-10, Vol.60 (2), p.63-81 |
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description | An anonymous sixteenth-century painting of the King’s Fountain in the Lisbon Alfama, Chafariz d’el Rei, recently the subject of speculation over its provenance and date, has also been of interest because of its depiction of so many black and white figures together, from all social strata and walks of life and in many (often water-related) trades in a public square. It very obviously suggests that black residents of Lisbon at that time, if originating from the trade in slaves, had been able to make their way as freedmen and women into Portuguese society. With careful reading of the figures in the painting against other written and painted portrayals from the time, the author attempts to deduce if this was an accurate depiction of Lisbon in the 1500s, or whether the painter might have distorted reality to render Lisbon as a ludic or exotic space – or indeed to disparage it. The painter himself might well have come from northern Europe. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/0306396818794355 |
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subjects | 16th century Accuracy Art history Artistic representation (Imitation) Decoding Females Slavery Social stratification Women |
title | Lisbon in the sixteenth century: decoding the Chafariz d’el Rei |
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