Fashion for God
| schema:name | "Fashion for God" |
| "Religious textiles from hidden churches in the Dutch Republic 1580-1800" | |
| schema:contributor | Rijksmuseum Het Catharijneconvent |
| schema:about | weefkunst |
| liturgische gewaden | |
| <n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb1> | |
| <n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb2> | |
| <n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb3> | |
| <n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb4> | |
| schema:abstract | ""Traditionally, priest's vestments have been pre-eminently the objects on which the most attention and money was spent in a church. They were, and often still are, of a dazzling and heavenly beauty. When the survival of the Catholic Church was threatened during the Republic and Catholic shelter churches were not allowed to be recognisable from the street, what was not allowed to be shown on the outside was compensated for on the inside. In the 17th century, the robes became gold, silver and silk expressions of silent resistance, but also of a feminist agenda of the makers. Behind closed doors, everything was literally and figuratively pulled out to propagate the Catholic faith. Worn ball gowns with colourful flowered French, English and Chinese fashion fabrics were donated to the church by rich, pious women so that beautiful and special church vestments could be made from them. So it could easily happen that a priest in a pink robe with flowers stood at the altar"-- Provided by publisher."@en |
| schema:editor | Beer, Richard de |
| Arts, Pim | |
| schema:identifier | <n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb5> |
|
schema:in |
"dut" |
| "eng" | |
|
schema:subject |
<n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb6> |
| <n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb7> | |
|
schema:work |
Fashion for God: religious textiles from hidden churches in the Dutch Republic 1580-1800 |
schema:about →
<n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb1>
|
schema:alternate |
"Christian art and symbolism--Netherlands--Exhibitions" |
schema:about →
<n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb2>
|
schema:alternate |
"Church vestments--Netherlands--Catholic Church--History--Exhibitions" |
schema:about →
<n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb3>
|
schema:alternate |
"Ecclesiastical embroidery--Netherlands--History--Exhibitions" |
schema:about →
<n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb4>
|
schema:alternate |
"Textile fabrics--Netherlands--History--Exhibitions" |
schema:identifier →
<n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb5>
|
schema:property |
"NL-AmRIJ" |
| schema:value | "329836" |
schema:subjectOf →
<n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb6>
| schema:text | Includes translation |
|
schema:additional |
aat:300435416 |
schema:subjectOf →
<n7dff4a2f1bbe43d8a7bec08764f5141eb7>
| schema:text | The Church of Utrecht and the Dutch Mission : synonyms and schism / Dirk Jan Schoon -- Women at work : Catholic church vestments in the Northern Netherlands 1580-1700 / Richard de Beer -- The opulence of gold, silver and silk / Marike van Roon -- Eighteenth-century vestments with 'coloured' flowers / René Lughtigheid -- Silk : trade and production in the Dutch Republic / Pim Arts -- Visual essay. Religious textiles -- Catalogue. Seventeenth century ; Eighteenth century -- Glossary -- Archives. |
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schema:additional |
aat:300195187 |