Art History: The Basics

Höfundur Diana Newall; Grant Pooke

Útgefandi Taylor & Francis

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9780415856614

Útgáfa 2

Höfundarréttur 2021

3.390 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover
  • Endorsements
  • Half Title
  • Series Page
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Dedication
  • Table of Contents
  • List of figures
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction to the second edition
  • 1. Art histories and art theories
  • Introduction
  • What is art?
  • What is art history?
  • The classical concept of ‘art’
  • Plato’s idea of mimesis
  • Issues arising from art as imitation
  • Medieval art and its interpretation
  • Art as imitation in the Renaissance
  • Giorgio Vasari and the origins of western art history
  • Early writing on art
  • Academies and the ‘Hierarchy of Genres’
  • Winckelmann, art history and the western Enlightenment
  • Art as an expression of the ‘will to create’
  • Aesthetic comparison and contrast
  • Connoisseurship and art history
  • The limits of connoisseurship
  • Bell’s theory of ‘significant form’
  • The theory of art as expression
  • Objections to Collingwood’s theory
  • Art as abstraction or idea
  • Art understood as ‘family resemblance’
  • The Institutional Theory of Art
  • Art history in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
  • Art history and the 1930s diaspora
  • British art history, the Courtauld and Warburg Institutes
  • The ‘New Art History’
  • Beyond the ‘New Art History’
  • Summary
  • 2. Formalism, modernism and modernity
  • Introduction
  • Formalist art theories and the avant-garde
  • The formal components of painting and design
  • Abstraction as process
  • Formal language, abstraction and sculpture
  • Observations on formal analysis
  • Formalism as art practice and art theory
  • Roger Fry and a British formalist tradition
  • Avant-garde art and ‘the crisis of taste’
  • Greenberg and the dominance of modernist theory
  • Modernism and the White Cube hang
  • Objections to Greenberg’s modernism
  • Art after Greenberg
  • Summary
  • 3. Marxist and social art histories
  • Introduction
  • Who was Karl Marx?
  • Art as ideology
  • Contextual analyses
  • David and the Paris Salon
  • Reactions and responses to the Horatii
  • The Horatii as political metaphor
  • Iconography and iconology
  • Iconology and ‘intrinsic meaning’
  • Art, alienation and ‘species being’
  • Art as commodity and a ‘deposit of a social relationship’
  • Superstructure and infrastructure
  • Art and agency – ‘life creates consciousness, not consciousness life’
  • David’s Horatii as a revolutionary manifesto
  • The Horatii as a canonical painting of the French Revolution
  • Tendency and social commitment – what should art and artists do?
  • Malevich’s Black Square and the ‘zero of forms’
  • Social interpretation and meaning
  • Art and the ‘social command’: Soviet Socialist Realism and its legacies
  • Social realism in Europe
  • Critical theory, the ‘Frankfurt School’ and Gerhard Richter
  • T. J. Clark and a British Marxist tradition
  • New social and political constellations
  • Summary
  • 4. Semiotics and poststructuralism
  • Introduction
  • Introducing Language and Linguistics
  • Ferdinand de Saussure
  • Charles Sanders Peirce
  • Developments of semiosis
  • Art and semiotics
  • Signs and representations of reality
  • Modalities of the sign
  • Challenging ‘reality’
  • Whose ‘reality’?
  • Structural analysis
  • Syntagmatic analysis of images
  • Discourse and power
  • Discourse and ‘metanarratives’
  • Paradigmatic oppositions
  • Binary oppositions and art
  • Markedness
  • Figurative language
  • Social semiotics
  • Poststructuralism and its critics
  • Summary
  • 5. Psychoanalysis, art and the fractured self
  • Introduction
  • Freud, psychoanalysis and psycho-sexual development
  • The Oedipus complex
  • The psyche’s tripartite structure
  • Instinctual energies, creativity and sublimation
  • Surrealism and psychoanalysis
  • Gombrich and psychoanalysis
  • Klein, Stokes, Fuller and the ‘infant–mother’ paradigm
  • Lacan: the mirror stage; the symbolic, the imaginary and the real
  • Feminist challenges to the Freudian and Lacanian psyche
  • Creativity, sadism and perversion
  • A Freudian postscript: from symptoms to symbols
  • Art and abjection
  • Abjection, ambivalence and contemporary art
  • Summary
  • 6. Representations of gender, sex and sexualities
  • Introduction
  • Defining sex, gender and sexuality
  • Classical representation of the human form
  • Visualising gender difference
  • Gender, status and power
  • Challenges to gender boundaries
  • Viewing the nude
  • The gaze: the pleasure of looking
  • Mary Cassatt’s challenge to the male gaze
  • Caught in the act: subverting the pleasure of the gaze
  • Feminism and art history
  • Feminist interventions in art
  • Expanding feminism
  • Contemporary art history and feminism
  • Gender perspectives on contemporary art
  • Developments in gender studies
  • New paradigms of gender, sex and sexuality
  • Queer theory and LGBTQIA+
  • Beyond gender: the body as sensorium and spectacle
  • Summary
  • 7. Art and art histories since the 1960s
  • Introduction
  • Art and ‘paradigm shifts’
  • Duchamp’s readymades
  • American hegemony and a new order
  • Death of the author
  • Art, objecthood and theatricality
  • Art as commodity and concept
  • The Institutional Theory of Art
  • Limitations of the Institutional Theory
  • Lyotard and the death of the ‘metanarratives’
  • New countercultures for the 1960s and 1970s
  • Photography, cultural reproduction and oppositional postmodern cultures
  • Approaching the postmodern and late modern: how soon is now?
  • The contemporary as ‘critical pluralism’
  • Visual cultures and ‘double-coding’
  • Baudrillard and the four orders of the simulacra
  • ‘The End of History’?
  • Relational Aesthetics
  • Summary
  • 8. Postcolonialism, globalisation and art histories
  • Introduction
  • Western-centrism within art history
  • Global cultural and artistic interactions
  • Western artistic appropriations and ‘Primitivism’
  • The struggle for independence and decolonisation
  • Edward Said and Orientalism
  • Postcolonialism and postcolonial studies
  • Globalisation
  • Legacies and continuities: empire, coloniality and the subaltern
  • Interpreting cultural interaction and exchange
  • Identity, agency and place
  • Globalising art history and global contemporary art
  • Afterword from Oceania
  • Summary
  • Resources
  • Galleries and museums: collections online
  • Galleries, museums, virtual tours and videos
  • Digital archives, essays and glossaries
  • Other resources, magazines, journals, dictionaries and encyclopaedias
  • Sources of images
  • Glossary of terms
  • Bibliography
  • Index

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