Article

Multisensorial Experiences in Early Modern Artefacts

Details

Citation

Casimiro TM & Santos J (2025) Multisensorial Experiences in Early Modern Artefacts. Archaeologies, 21, pp. 181-208. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11759-024-09521-9

Abstract
This paper introduces a novel, quantitative approach to examining how early modern Portuguese ceramics reflect multisensory experiences, impacting their value and desirability. Our method combines archaeological and historical evidence to define a framework for classifying and quantifying the sensory appeal of artefacts, focussing on ceramics that engage smell, taste, touch, sight, and occasionally sound. Using a representative sample of sixteenth–eighteenth century Portuguese ceramics—primarily drinking vessels and plates—we developed a four-step methodology: identifying samples, gathering sensory responses from users, quantifying these responses, and validating results against historical prices. Through this process, we explored how sensory appeal contributed to the objects’ cultural and economic significance. Findings show that ceramics evoking stronger sensory responses, especially those stimulating smell and taste, had higher market values and prestige, suggesting sensory richness as a force of economic and social desirability. This study provides a replicable methodology for sensory archaeology, opening pathways for further investigation of sensory experiences in material culture.

Keywords
Ceramics; Senses; Multisensorial; Phenomenology

Journal
Archaeologies: Volume 21

StatusPublished
Publication date30/04/2025
Publication date online28/02/2025
Date accepted by journal14/02/2025
PublisherSpringer Science and Business Media LLC
ISSN1555-8622
eISSN1935-3987

People (1)

Dr Tânia Casimiro

Dr Tânia Casimiro

Research Fellow (CSPM), Philosophy