A Search for the Whirlpool of Artifice: The Cosmology of Giulio Camillo
Released: Feb 23, 2006
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Format: Hardcover, 154 pages
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Description:
Giulio Camillo (1480-1544) was a poet, scientist and image-maker. Three months before he died, Camillo dictated the text of his most important and secret work to his agent, Girolamo Muzio. Muzio's transcription of L'Idea del Theatro was eventually published in Florence in 1550. Camillo's secret was about man's relationship to the heavens. Camillo envisaged a living, tangible network of relationships that holds the cosmos into being. Heavenly influences, in the form of 'celestial streams', rain down on the earth. Man is as much part of the earth as he is of the stars. Rocks and stones, earth, flowers and trees are alive and aware of their holy origin. The skin and hair of man is receptive to the flows of heavenly love. Camillo believed that it was the sun and not the earth that has pride of place in the universe. Camillo dictated his text a few months after publication of Copernicus' Revolution of the Heavenly Spheres but Camillo did not use mathematics to prove his theories. Instead his conception of the universe is of a vast array of images. Thus the heavens are described by Camillo in terms of visual signs. A Search for the Source of the Whirlpool of Artifice looks at the connection between image and science in the sixteenth century and will appeal to emblemologists and students of ideas-especially those of the renaissance, the history of science and the history of art.
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