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Reading Jan van Eyck’s Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife

Reading Jan van Eyck’s Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife. 閱讀范艾克的名畫 《 阿諾菲尼的婚禮 》. Section One: 18:00-19:00. 1. 介紹范艾克 《 阿諾菲尼的婚禮 》 相關背景 2. 主題討論 the concepts of photographic realism 3. 報告 (1): 觀點與角度、科學與藝術、閱讀與繪畫。 ( 物治系 ). Section Two: 19:10-21:00. 同學報告與討論: 1. 學生英詩作品朗誦

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Reading Jan van Eyck’s Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife

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  1. Reading Jan van Eyck’s Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife 閱讀范艾克的名畫 《阿諾菲尼的婚禮》 Alice Y. Chang

  2. Section One: 18:00-19:00 • 1.介紹范艾克《阿諾菲尼的婚禮》相關背景 • 2. 主題討論 the concepts of photographic realism • 3. 報告(1): 觀點與角度、科學與藝術、閱讀與繪畫。(物治系) Alice Y. Chang

  3. Section Two: 19:10-21:00 • 同學報告與討論: • 1.學生英詩作品朗誦 • 2. 報告(2): 透視法與眼鏡簡史。(職治系) • 3.報告(3): 繪畫技巧與3-D視覺效果(資管系) • 4.報告(4): 解剖學與文藝復興時期(職治系) • 討論。 Alice Y. Chang

  4. outline • Problematic • About Jan van Eyck • Details of Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife • Reading materials from Scientific American • The Renaissance Episteme • Students’ Presentation Alice Y. Chang

  5. Problematic The formation of the Renaissance Episteme? Alice Y. Chang

  6. The turning point • The grand trajectory of Western painting, we see something very interesting taking place  at the dawn of the Renaissance Alice Y. Chang

  7. 1425: before and after • Before rough 1425, most images were rather stylized, even schematic, but afterward we see paintings that have an almost photographic realism. • Ideal world real world Alice Y. Chang

  8. For instance, • Jan van Eyck’s Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife • Three-dimensionality, presence, individuality and psychological depth Alice Y. Chang

  9. What happened? • For the first time, we find portraits that really look like us! • How can we explain such a paradigmatic shift in paintings? Alice Y. Chang

  10. Jan van Eyck • Flemish painter (b. before 1395, Maaseik, d. 1441, Bruges) • Biography: http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/eyck Alice Y. Chang

  11. Jan van Eyck. . . • Is the greatest artist of the early Netherlands school. • Had the outstanding skill as an oil painter • Invented the medium to allow for the preservation of the colors • built up layers of transparent glazes, • captured objects in the minutest detail Alice Y. Chang

  12. Glaze • a transparent or translucent color applied to modify the effect of a painted surface • a smooth glossy or lustrous surface or finish • a glassy film Alice Y. Chang

  13. luminous clarity • He had an eye almost miraculously responsive to every detail or his world, not just in that he saw it, but that he understood its value. • he saw the most ordinary things with a wonderful sharpness and a great sense of their awesome beauty. Alice Y. Chang

  14. A Turning Point • From the late medieval arts (the Gothic arts) to the early Renaissance Arts/  Late Gothic and The Early Renaissance • Geographically, the Southern Europe (Italy) was going to take the place of artistic center. Alice Y. Chang

  15. History of arts Medieval arts  Renaissance Arts Alice Y. Chang

  16. A comparative study Alice Y. Chang

  17. The Gothic Style • pointed arch • vault rib • flying buttress Alice Y. Chang

  18. International Gothic style • Illuminated manuscript in the Middle Ages Alice Y. Chang

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  20. Light and shadow • The Middle Ages: Divine light and intellectual light • The Renaissance: The corporeal light (the real world) • God-centered world  human-centered world Alice Y. Chang

  21. Paintings by Jan van Eyck An analysis of his style Alice Y. Chang

  22. The Virgin of Chancellor Rolin1433-34 (170 Kb); Wood, 66 x 62 cm (26 x 24 1/2 in); Musee du Louvre, Paris Alice Y. Chang

  23. The Ghent alarpiece Alice Y. Chang

  24. Adoration of the Lambdetail: bottom half of panel depicting angelic musicians, 1432 (30 Kb); Cathedral of St. Bavo, Ghent Alice Y. Chang

  25. Crucifixion1420-25Oil on wood transferred to canvas, 56,5 x 19,5 cmMetropolitan Museum of Art, New York Alice Y. Chang

  26. Last Judgment1420-25Oil on wood transferred to canvas, 56,5 x 19,5 cmMetropolitan Museum of Art, New York Alice Y. Chang

  27. Stigmatization of St Francis 1428-29 Alice Y. Chang

  28. A New Realism • fidelity in art and literature to nature or to real life and to accurate representation without idealizationPhoto-realism in painting characterized by extremely meticulous depiction of detail Alice Y. Chang

  29. Fidelity • when you copy the detail and quality of an original, such as a picture, sound or story exactly: • accuracy in describing or reporting facts or details Alice Y. Chang

  30. c. 1435Silverpoint, 212 x 180 mmKupferstichkabinett, Dresden 1431-32Oil on wood, 34,1 x 27,3 cmKunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna Portrait of Cardinal Albergati painting media Alice Y. Chang

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  34. Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife Alice Y. Chang

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  36. Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfinic. 1435Oil on panel29 x 20 cmStaatliche Museen, Gemaeldegalerie-Dahlem, Berlin Alice Y. Chang

  37. Detailed analysis • http://employees.oneonta.edu/farberas/arth/arth214_folder/Van_Eyck/Arnolfini.html Alice Y. Chang

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  43. More notes/ conflicting viewpoints • Wedding? This work is not intended as a record of their wedding./ As today, marriages in 15th-century Flanders could take place privately rather than in church. • Pregnant? His wife is not pregnant, as is often thought, but holding up her full-skirted dress in the contemporary fashion. Alice Y. Chang

  44. “Jan van Eyck was here 1434” • The ornate Latin signature translates as 'Jan van Eyck was here 1434'. • The similarity to modern graffiti is not accidental. • Van Eyck often inscribed his pictures in a witty way. Alice Y. Chang

  45. What is inside the mirror? • The mirror reflects two figures in the doorway. One may be the painter himself. Arnolfini raises his right hand as he faces them, perhaps as a greeting. Alice Y. Chang

  46. Reading Stork, David G. “Optics and Realism in Renaissance Art.” Scientific American (December 2004): 77-83. Alice Y. Chang

  47. at the dawn of the Renaissance. • When we consider the grand trajectory of Western painting, we see something very interesting taking place at the dawn of the Renaissance. Alice Y. Chang

  48. Schematic style photographic realism • Before roughly 1425, most images were rather stylized, even schematic, but afterward we see paintings that have an almost photographic realism. Alice Y. Chang

  49. Portrait of Giovanni Arnolfini and His Wife • Three dimensionality • Presence • Individuality and psychological depth • “Portraits really look like us!” Alice Y. Chang

  50. New Art/ ars nova • David Hockey’s bold and controversial theory: • Artist used lenses and mirror to project images onto canvases or similar surfaces and then trace and paint over the results. Alice Y. Chang

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