Holy Smoke: Censers Across Cultures
By (Author) Beate Fricke
Hirmer Verlag
Hirmer Verlag
30th April 2024
25th January 2024
Germany
General
Non Fiction
203.7
Hardback
368
Width 216mm, Height 305mm
1100g
Religious art from four continents and across cultures - seeing and smelling the sacred. Holy Smoke: Censers Across Cultures investigates the practice of incense - the use of material objects to communicate with the divine - in religious context as it has been used in cultures worldwide across historical periods, religions, and cultures. The fragrant smoke of incense filling the air can be witnessed in any tradition, whether polytheistic or monotheistic, whether in the Ancient Near East, or Medieval Europe. Censers are ubiquitous among religious paraphernalia, and on a truly global scale. Focusing on case studies not only places the censer in a constellation of other religious artefacts, but also relocates the importance of rituals that have long been placed at the margins of the study of religion, art and ritual. Emerging from this, we hope, is a better grasp of the role of sensorial elements in the fostering of the devotional practices of world religions.
Beate Fricke's research focuses on the history of images in the Middle Ages, relics in Early and High Medieval Art as well as objects as archives of a history of applied arts, knowledge transfer and trade in the global "Middle Ages". Before joining the University of Bern in 2017, she was Professor for Medieval Art at the University of California, Berkeley.