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El camarín del desengaño : Juan de Espina, coleccionista y curioso del siglo XVII / Pedro Reula Baquero.

LIBRA N5277.2.E87 R48 2019
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Van Pelt Library N5277.2.E8 R48 2019
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Reula Baquero, Pedro, author.
Contributor:
Anne and Joseph Trachtman Memorial Book Fund.
Series:
Colección Confluencias (Centro de Estudios Europa Hispánica)
Colección Confluencias
Language:
Spanish
Subjects (All):
Collectors and collecting.
Art--Collectors and collecting.
Spain.
Espina, Juan de, 1568-1642--Art collections.
Espina, Juan de.
Art--Collectors and collecting--Spain.
Art.
Collectors and collecting--Spain.
Art--Private collections.
Physical Description:
534 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm.
Place of Publication:
Madrid : CEEH, Centro de Estudios Europa Hispánica, [2019]
Summary:
Juan de Espina Velasco (1583-1642), a nobleman of Madrid and cleric of minor orders, has gone down in history initially as the unwitting protagonist of two eighteenth-century magical plays by the dramatist José de Cañizares and subsequently, in the twentieth century, as the enigmatic and jealous owner of the Leonoardo da Vinci manuscripts now in the Biblioteca Nacional de España. His early fame as a necromancer comes from rumours that circulated in his own day about the entertaining scientific activities he organised in his home in the form of natural magic shows, where, making use of a certain amount of technology, he put the audience's credulity to the test. He also set out to bring back the lost genre of enharmonic music, which ordered the music scale perfectly and mathematically and with which the ancient musicians were said to work wonders on men's nature and state of mind. In addition to the Leonardo codices, his home housed an exquisite collection of books, paintings, precious metalwork and ivory pieces objects classified as 'naturalia' and 'artificialia', which made up what we would now call a cabinet of curiosities, commonly known in Spain as a 'camarín'. Documentary and literary sources describe Juan de Espina as a man of many pastimes, extravagant for having assembled the instruments used to torture Rodrigo Calderón, and mad for wishing to part with the treasures he had amassed. An interpretation based on a neo-stoic approach lends a certain coherence to the apparent contradictions of Espina, who embodies the curious or virtuous type who sought wisdom in knowledge of the truth and virtue in the deceitfulness of earthly appearances.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 493-523) and index.
Local Notes:
Acquired for the Penn Libraries with assistance from the Anne and Joseph Trachtman Memorial Book Fund.
ISBN:
9788415245827
8415245823
OCLC:
1104217931

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