Names to Remember

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A01=Heidi C. Gearhart
art and devotion
art and social status
artist identity
artistic identity
Author_Heidi C. Gearhart
authorship in art
Category=AGA
cultural memory
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
gender and art history
history of authorship
history of the artist
inscriptions and artworks
medieval art history
medieval artists
medieval Europe
medieval makers
medieval visual culture
memory and forgetting
named artists in the Middle Ages
piety and artistic labor
remembrance in medieval culture
women and medieval art

Product details

  • ISBN 9780271101354
  • Weight: 839g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 19 May 2026
  • Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Since its beginnings, art history has turned on the power of artists’ names. Exhibitions, galleries, and books revolve around them, and artists’ personas continue to captivate audiences. Medieval art, however, has long been cast as an exception—a world thought to lack known makers, where piety eclipsed personality and anonymous craftspeople served God rather than fame.

Names to Remember takes a new and nuanced look at this longstanding paradigm. Focusing on Europe from ca. 700 to ca. 1200, Heidi C. Gearhart uncovers a surprising abundance of names, stories, and images of artists and examines how they functioned within their cultural and material contexts. Drawing on inscriptions, saints’ lives, chronicles, and artworks, she shows that naming an artist was rarely a neutral act: it could invite contemplation, signal virtue, or shape social and spiritual identities.

By revealing how remembrance—and forgetting—helped define artistry itself, Names to Remember reimagines the place of the artist in medieval culture. Gearhart demonstrates how gender, status, and devotion determined whose names endured and whose were lost, offering a new understanding of authorship and artistic value in the Middle Ages. This study will engage art historians, medievalists, and scholars of gender and cultural memory seeking to understand how the very idea of the artist was formed.

Heidi C. Gearhart is Associate Professor of Art History at George Mason University. She is the author of Theophilus and the Theory and Practice of Medieval Art, also published by the Pennsylvania State University Press, which was awarded Honorable Mention for the 2018 International Center of Medieval Art Book Prize.

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