The Max Planck Research Group
“Art and Knowledge in Pre-modern Europe” investigates how artists invented and appropriated knowledge, conceived and categorized knowledge, and transmitted and circulated knowledge in the visual and decorative arts in pre-modern Europe. One part of this project studies how artists (painters, goldsmiths, glass-makers and others) applied optical knowledge when working in different mediums (such as oil paint or glass), and how they transformed bodies of knowledge in the science of optics.
This is a collection of sources for the history of optics and its various appropriations in the decorative and visual arts from the fifteenth to the seventeenth century. Taking as a starting point artists’ reception and appropriation of Alhacen’s De aspectibus, the treatise that shaped the science of optics from the 11th century on, the collection enables interdisciplinary research between art history, history of science and technology, and technical art history.