
Attribution
Alex PottsPublication Details
BookYale University Press1994Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (UPPER LEVEL) N7483.W5 P68 1994 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
View record in LOLA catalogDescription
This is the first intellectual biography in English of Johann Joachim Winckelmann (1717-1768), one of the most famous eighteenth-century German philosophers and aestheticians who is considered by many to be the father of modern art history. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)Subject
Notes
- Winckelmann was not just an historian of considerable stature. He was also a very powerful writer who offered an unusually eloquent account of the aesthetic and imaginative charge of the Greek ideal in art. He is particularly revealing as to the political and the homoerotic sexual content of the fantasies that gave the antique ideal male nude its larger resonance. This book re -examines Winckelmann’s canonical status as the so-called father of modern art history showing how his systematic definitions of style and historical development can cast a new light on present-day understanding of these notions. The complexities of his new historical perspectives on the art of antiquity both prefigure and undermine the more strictly historicising views of the Greek ideal put forward in the nineteenth century. The force of Winckelmann’s writing can only be fully understood if it is seen in the context of the distinctive preoccupations and values of Enlightenment culture. It has acquired a new significance, however, as the darker aspect of Enlightenment ideals - such as the fantasy of a completely free sovereign subjectivity associated with Greek art - come more and more to the fore. Winckelmann’s writing has a richness and density that take it well beyond the bounds of the simple rationalist art history and Neo-classical art theory with which it is usually associated. He often seems to speak disturbingly directly to our present awareness of the discomforting ideological and psychic contradictions inherent in supposedly ideal symbolic forms
Contents
- I. Inventing a History of Art. The Significance of Winckelmann’s History. A New Paradigm. History as System - - II. Fact and Fantasy. A Lover’s Discourse. Rise and Decline. Dichotomies of Freedom. Presences and Absences
- III. Style. The High Style and the Beautiful Style. Precedents. Visual Facts. Verbal and Visual. The Rhetoric of the Image
- IV. Beauty and Sublimity. The Sex of the Sublime. Beautiful Masculinity. The Sublime Fetish
- V. Ideal Bodies. The Greek Ideal and the Ideal Ego. Oneness and Ideal Identity. The Body of Narcissus. Nightmare and Utopia
- VI. Freedom and Desire. A Free Subject. Politics Patronage and Identity. Friendship and Desire. Endings
- VII. Afterlife. Jacobin Politics and Victorian Aestheticism. Revolutionary Heroes. Modernity and its Discontents
ISBN
- 0300058136
LCCN
Open Library ID
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