Portraiture and Arithmetic in Sixteenth-Century Bavaria: Deciphering Barthel Beham’sCalculator*
-
Published:2013
Issue:1
Volume:66
Page:35-80
-
ISSN:0034-4338
-
Container-title:Renaissance Quarterly
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Renaiss. Q.
Abstract
In his portrait of an unidentified man (Vienna, 1529), Barthel Beham portrays the sitter paused in the midst of a math problem. As has been discovered, the numbers and symbols belong to the vocabulary of numerical calculation. This finding first raises the question of why a patron would want to be shown doing computation with Arabic numerals in a portrait. In 1529, numerical calculation was a commercial tool, not a field with humanistic/social cachet such as geometry. Further, the depicted computation does not make sense: the symbols and numbers are arranged in the form of a problem without actually being one. Yet the patron either did not notice or care. This article argues that the incomplete computation is not only a reflection of the contemporary status of mathematics using Arabic numbers, but also provides a way of understanding how the painting functioned as a portrait in the social milieu of the sixteenth-century Munich court.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Visual Arts and Performing Arts,History
Reference87 articles.
1. Eck, Johann Maier.;Werner;Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie,1877
2. Wolfschmidt Gundrun . “Planeten, Kometen, Finsternisse. Peter Apian als Astronom und Instrumentenbauer.” In Peter Apian (1995), 93–106.