Early Modern Visual and Spatial Imaginaries: The Lessons of Sketch Maps
Tuesday, March 11, 2025 4:45pm
About this Event
232 East Ave, Central Campus
Department of History of Art & Visual Studies Visual Culture Colloquium.
Join us for a talk by Ricardo Padrón (University of Virginia).
This Visual Culutre Colloquium will take place in Goldwin Smith Hall G22.
Abstract
What do we make of “bad maps” and “amateur maps,” the kind of cartographic image that is often drawn by a person with none of the appropriate professional training, and perhaps little or no interest in mimicking “real maps”? Sketch maps are scattered throughout the documentary record of the early modern world, but they are rarely the object of scholarly attention. This talk will examine what these maps might have to tell us about the ways people imagined space and place in the early modern Iberian world.
Biography
Ricardo Padrón is Professor of Spanish at the University of Virginia. He is interested in the history of space, place, and empire in the early modern imagination, with a particular emphasis on its literary and cartographic dimensions. He is the author of The Spacious Word: Cartography, Literature and Empire in Early Modern Spain (Chicago 2004) and The Indies of the Setting Sun: How Early Modern Spain Mapped the Far East as the Transpacific West (Chicago 2020). His work has been supported by the NEH and the ACLS. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the Renaissance Society of America and is the founding president of the Society for Early Transpacific Studies.
Event Details
See Who Is Interested
2 people are interested in this event
User Activity
No recent activity