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Art Historical Approaches: Theories and Methodologies for Understanding Images

Art Historical Approaches: Theories and Methodologies for Understanding Images. Readings: Theory Text Ch. 4, 13:2. Emperor Qinshihuang's Tomb (r. 221-207 BC), rediscovered c. 1974. Xian another view. Art & Images as a way to understand or know history, life & the world.

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Art Historical Approaches: Theories and Methodologies for Understanding Images

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  1. Art Historical Approaches: Theories and Methodologies for Understanding Images Readings: Theory Text Ch. 4, 13:2 Emperor Qinshihuang's Tomb (r. 221-207 BC), rediscovered c. 1974

  2. Xian another view

  3. Art & Images as a way to understand or know history, life & the world Pompei & Herculaneum-rediscovery c. 1748

  4. Portrait of literate woman from Herculaneum c. 50 AD

  5. Pompei--Vesuvius Erupts 79 AD

  6. Foundations of Art History as a Discipline (Western Traditions) & It’s Influence on Ways of Thinking about (and analyzing) Visual Images • Discussion of Art History as a Discipline (take notes as this part is not included in detail in this outline) • Changing notions & debates : what visual is representation doing? • Mimesis • Art as imitation of absolute ideas (world of forms--Plato) • Art does not reproduce visual appearance but essential idea (not just what exists but what could or should exist--Artistotle) • Imitatio (art as representation of nature, reality, the world) • Imitation of what (ancients? natural world? Universal truths? Artist’s vision? Reflection of context? Anticipation of viewer?) • Questions of formalism, iconography, iconology, stylistic movement, etc…

  7. Core early foundations inspired by humanists from the Italian Renaissance: • Leon Battista Alberti (1404 • Philosopher: rationalism, moderation, following nature, public good, ancient philosophers • Admiration for ancient styles: Major work analyzing architectural styles & role of architecture in civic life, notions of beauty : De Re Aedificatoria, c. 1450-72 • Vasari’s Lives of the Most Excellent Architects, Painters and Sculptors (Lives of Artists in your readings) 1550 • Notion of connecting art to world views, socio-economic & cultural contexts emerges Maison Carré, Nimes, c. 19 AD

  8. Greco-Roman Architecture • Large built public spaces • Visual display of power • Lost engineering skills • Insights into culture • Framing spectacles

  9. Classification & Analysis of Architectural Styles--Relation to General Theories of Life-Nature • Illustration from Diderot’s Encyclopedie

  10. Transition from Byzantine to Early Renaissance Gentile da Fabriano early 14th c. Cimabue Madonna Enthroned 13th c.

  11. Notion of New Techniques for Depicting ‘Reality’/Nature as “we” see it or “as it really is” (??) • Renaissance rediscovery of linear perspective (Edgerton) • Depicting 3 dimensions (3D) on picture plane (2D) • Not just about art & science--“art in the service of God” (Edgerton)

  12. Rediscovery of Linear Perspective

  13. Art & Science “in the service of God” • D. Veneziano, Madonna & Child 1445

  14. Edgerton’s analysis of use of symbolic use of perspective • Form & composition as key to meaning or content

  15. Content/Meaning, Norm & Form • Formalism • Example: theories of Heinrich Wöfflin Principles of Art History… 1-Linear vs. painterly 2-Plane vs. recession 3-Closed form to open form 4-Multiplicity to unity 5-Absolute clarity to relative clarity • For 16th-17th art but applicable to later art • Examples: Ingres vs. Delacroix in 19th c. French painting

  16. Ingres Valpincon Bather

  17. Delacroix--Liberty Leading the People

  18. Panofsky’s ideas about meaning & iconology (Theory Text Ch. 4:1)

  19. Iconology & Search for Methodologies Beyond Formalism • Panofsky is critical of Wolfflin’s Formalist analysis (ex. triangle between legs of Michelangelos’s David)--Analysis of motifs & compositions • Seeks ‘intrinsic’ meaning or content

  20. “Intrinsic Meaning”=Underlying principles that reveal attitudes (Panofsky) • Examples of change in conventions about depictions of “The Adoration of Christ)

  21. Madonna Kneeling

  22. Abstract Art as a Challenge to “the canon” • Picasso Les Demoiselles d’Avignon • Continues 19thc tradition of new art challenging the ‘establishment’

  23. MANET Dejeuner sur l<herbe

  24. Impressionism (1870s)

  25. Neo-Impressionism

  26. Proliferation of stylistic movements • Cloisonism --Pont Aven School

  27. Re-evaluation of artists & art in terms of subsequent developments • Van Gogh self-portrait

  28. Relationships between artistic movements • Alfred Barr-- Museum of Modern Art exhibition catalogue

  29. Gombrich on art & invention or discovery • Example: Constable

  30. Constable

  31. JM Turner: Steam & Fog (before 1844)

  32. Svetlana Alpers • Meanings & the position of the viewer--when the artist becomes the observer & the gaze is turned on the spectator • Analysis of Velazquez’ Las Meninas • who is the viewer-subject? • What is the painting about? • Idea of multiple meanings • Modes of picturing relationships between the “viewer-subject”

  33. Detail of Velazquez’ Las Meminas • Detail

  34. Manet’s Olympia

  35. Buck-Morris on critical analysis of contemporary images & image-making • Aesthetic Experience & the “virtual” • Example of Surrealsm--S. Dali The Persistence of Memory

  36. The “New Art History” • c.1980s • Context • “art for art’s sake” • Political and economic contexts • Anti-racist, feminist & post-colonialist influences • Not just “great works” (canons) or “great men” (questioning bias in art historical methods) • Re-thinking older classifications of art and non-art • Non-representational art • Popular culture Pop Art (Roy Lichtenstein Nude with Beach Ball)

  37. Artists had long been challenging definitions of what is art, art history and who can define it Marcel Duchamp. Fountain, original (left) and recreations of lost 1917 “Original”

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