The Five Senses in Willem II van Haecht's Cabinet of Cornelis van Der Geest

Intellectual History Review 20 (1):103-121 (2010)
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Abstract

Willem II van Haecht?s panel of the Cabinet of Cornelis van der Geest (1628), introduces the viewer to the theme of the Five Senses by including five prominently displayed paintings, each corresponding to one of the senses, in the foreground. The paper offers a new reading of the panel, suggesting that this image may be read as an allegory of the Five Senses, proposing this theme as a key to the rhetorical performance the collector, van der Geest, is shown undertaking, and connecting the senses to the picture?s punning motto: Vive l?Esprit

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