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- Title
A Spectral Spectacle: Dutch Mannerist Portals at Amsterdam's New Philanthropic Sites, 1581-1645.
- Authors
WAN, SIM HINMAN
- Abstract
After Amsterdam's late medieval Catholic monasteries were surrendered to the Protestant government in 1578, four of these properties were converted into an orphanage, a mental asylum, and two gender-specific reformatories respectively before the turn of the century. Portals with Dutch Mannerist expressions were installed at the principal entrances as a publicly visible feature of modernisation for the repurposed complexes. This essay is a study of these architectural objects and their socio-political value for the city's philanthropic campaign that affirmed middle-class power. It argues that the portals, completed with narrative relief panels and didactic inscriptions, were a means for Amsterdam's authorities to redefine the spectacle of social marginality. Underclass visibility to the general population, once a concrete sight of panhandlers and vagrants occupying the urban landscape, became an abstract image of civic discipline. Such an image enabled sequestered and disappeared lives to reappear, with a spectral quality integral to Foucault's analysis of modern society's compulsion to stow away indigent bodies. Considering the seventeenth- century Dutch moral geography of moderating wealth through philanthropy, such a 'spectral spectacle' paralleled the Baroque theatricality of Counter-Reformation Rome as a spatial experience that advanced a more secular mode of devotion to the community.
- Subjects
AMSTERDAM (Netherlands); PSYCHIATRIC hospitals; RATINGS of cities &; towns; MODERN society; COUNTER-Reformation; MONASTERIES; POLITICAL refugees; CORPORATE giving; SOCIAL marginality
- Publication
Early Modern Low Countries, 2021, Vol 5, Issue 2, p332
- ISSN
2543-1587
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.51750/emlc11337