Dana Arnold

Art History: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)

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  • Guillermo Ladd Huarachihas quoted3 years ago
    By using art as our starting point we can see the complex and intertwined strands that make up art history. This implies that art history is a subject or academic field of enquiry in its own right, rather than the result of the rules of one discipline being applied to another. I return to this point on a regular basis in this book. I aim to set out how histories of art have been constructed, to describe the ways in which we have been encouraged to think about art as a result, and also to introduce other ways of thinking about the visual in terms of its history.
  • Guillermo Ladd Huarachihas quoted3 years ago
    In the case of biographical histories, we look for evidence of youth, maturity, and old age in the work of an artist. This works quite well if the artist lived for a long time, but an untimely death does not lend itself to this kind of narrative arch.
  • Guillermo Ladd Huarachihas quoted3 years ago
    Indeed, the emphasis on style leads us to expect the notion of progression and constant development in art. If we want art to represent the world we think we see, then we can impose an expectation of a continual move towards naturalism. But how do we then think about art that is not interested in naturalistic representation? This kind of abstract or conceptual art can be sidelined and deemed of secondary importance –
  • Guillermo Ladd Huarachihas quoted3 years ago
    is only in recent years that the notion of stylistic progress in Western art has been reassessed
  • Guillermo Ladd Huarachihas quoted3 years ago
    histories of art that focus solely on style can easily neglect other aspects of an artwork such as its subject matter or its function
  • Guillermo Ladd Huarachihas quoted3 years ago
    The problem with concentrating on formal elements such as style is that style itself becomes the subject of discussion rather than the works of art. As we become preoccupied with marking out stylistic changes, we have to use our knowledge of what came after the work under discussion. The benefit of hindsight is essential here – how else could we know that the beginnings of an interest in nature and naturalism in the art of Early Renaissance Italy prefigured the consummate achievements of artists of the High Renaissance in this regard? Working backwards from the present imposes a line of development of which the outcome is already known. In this way, tracks or routes through the art of the past can favour certain styles – this is certainly the case with classical art and its reinterpretations.
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