Fr. 52.50

Depositions - Scenes From the Late Medieval Church and the Modern Museum

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext "Powell’s Depositions has the capacity to change the terms of debate in art history in fundamental and necessary ways." Informationen zum Autor Amy Knight Powell is Assistant Professor in Art History at the University of California! Irvine. Klappentext From late medieval re-enactments of the Deposition from the Cross to Sol Lewitt's Buried Cube! this book is about taking down images and about images that anticipate being taken down. "Powell's Depositions has the capacity to change the terms of debate in art history in fundamental and necessary ways." -- Caroline Walker Bynum, Common Knowledge Zusammenfassung From late medieval reenactments of the Deposition from the Cross to Sol Lewitt’s “Buried Cube,” Depositions is about taking down images and about images that anticipate being taken down. Foretelling their own depositions, as well as their re-elevations in contexts far from those in which they were made, the images studied in this book reveal themselves to be untimely — no truer to their first appearance than to their later reappearances. In Depositions , Amy Knight Powell makes the case that late medieval paintings and ritual reenactments of the Deposition from the Cross not only picture the deposition of Christ (the imago Dei ) but also allegorize the deposition of the image as such and, in so doing, prefigure the lowering of “dead images” during the Protestant Reformation. Late medieval pre-figurations of Reformation iconoclasm anticipate, in turn, the repeated “deaths” of art since the advent of photography: that is the premise of the vignettes devoted to twentieth-century works of art that conclude each chapter of this book. In these vignettes, images that once stood in late medieval churches now find themselves among works of art from the more recent past with which they share certain formal characteristics. These surreal encounters compel us to reckon with affinities between images from different times and places. Turning on its head the pejorative (art-historical) use of the term pseudomorphosis — formal resemblance where there is no similarity of artistic intent — Powell explores what happens to our understanding of historically and conceptually distant works of art when they look alike. ...

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Amy Knight Powell

Product details

Authors Amy Powell, Amy Knight Powell
Publisher The MIT Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 10.04.2012
 
EAN 9781935408208
ISBN 978-1-935408-20-8
No. of pages 384
Series Zone Books
Zone Books
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Art > Art history
Social sciences, law, business > Social sciences (general)

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