Fascinating.
CHRISTOPHER HOWSE, DAILY TELEGRAPH
There is a welcome emphasis on materiality, both real and implied, between the actual relic and the artistic materials that suggest other substances. Williamson also collects insights from a diverse group of scholars investigating interpretive possibilities. Recommended.
CHOICE
This highly informative book not only sheds brighter light on the reliquary tabernacles of fourteenth-century Siena, but also sets up numerous inquiries into broader questions of religious materiality, visibility, devotional practice, all the while considering the combination of material relics and painted space from a fresh perspective.
JOURNAL OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY
Williamson's book stands out as a new model for studies in the field in its skilled blending of iconography and materiality as interrelated methodologies. Her command of a broad range of scholarship, both theoretical and technical, along with her careful visual analyses presented in economical prose, result in an original and needed contribution to the understudied subject of Italian medieval reliquaries, as well as the history of art in late medieval Siena.
SPECULUM