Space, Function, and Iconography: Ceiling Painting in the Aristocratic Residences of Bohemia and Moravia

Authors

NOKKALA MILTOVÁ Radka

Year of publication 2024
Type Appeared in Conference without Proceedings
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Arts

Citation
Description The relationship between ceiling paintings and their spatial location within aristocratic residences has long been the subject of research. The iconography of the paintings is also occasionally used as an auxiliary tool in cases of absence of relevant sources related to the original function of residential spaces. Although this approach requires caution with regard to a number of factors, including possible change of function in relation to a new patron, later renovations, and alterations of the interior order of rooms, etc., in Bohemian and Moravian chateau and palace residences, a clear connection can be made between interior decorations and the function of the residential spaces. The paper focused on selected examples of 17th and 18th-century decorative programmes in Bohemia and Moravia, where ceiling paintings can be drawn upon to demonstrate characteristic iconographic schemes linked to individual parts of residences (bedrooms, main halls, audience rooms, etc.) or to trace the gendered division of spaces. The use of painted illusionary spatial elements that underline the functional aspects of individual rooms were be explored.

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