Now in its second edition, this volume is an accessible introduction to the history of art. Using an international range of examples, it provides the reader with a toolkit of concepts, ideas and methods relevant to understanding art history.
This new edition is fully updated with colour illustrations, increased coverage of non-western art and extended discussions of contemporary art theory. It introduces key ideas, issues and debates, exploring questions such as:
- What is art and what is meant by art history?
- What approaches and methodologies are used to interpret and evaluate art?
- How have ideas regarding medium, gender, identity and difference informed representation?
- What perspectives can psychoanalysis, semiotics and social art histories bring to the study of the discipline?
- How are the processes of postcolonialism, decolonisation and globalisation changing approaches to art history?
Complete with helpful subject summaries, a glossary, suggestions for future reading and guidance on relevant image archives, this bookis an ideal starting point for anyone studying art history as well as general readers with an interest in the subject.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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
Further reading
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
Further reading
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
Further reading
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
Further reading
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
Further reading
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
Further reading
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
Further Reading
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
Further reading
Resources
Glossary of Terms