Visual Studies:

Art History Course Intro

Prof. Jonathan Morgan

Starting with
the Basics

Portrait Bust Of Cardinal Richelieu
Kehinde Wiley, 2009

Subject:

The actual visual/physical elements that make up an artwork.

Context:

The conditions of the artwork's creation.

Content:

The intangible aspects of an artwork; the meaning behind the piece.

Portrait Bust Of Cardinal Richelieu
Kehinde Wiley, 2009

Portrait Bust of Cardinal Richelieu

Gian Lorenzo Bernini
1640-41 CE

Napoleon Crossing the Alps

Jacques-Louis David
1801 CE

Bull-Leaping Fresco

Palace of Knossos, Crete | Minoan | 1450 BCE

Comparative Analysis

Descent from the Cross
(a.k.a. Deposition)

Rogier van der Weyden

Oil on panel

1435-1438 CE

Culture: Flemish

Flagellation of Christ

Piero della Francesca

Tempera and oil on panel

1455-1460 CE

Culture: Florentine

Flaggelation of Christ | della Francesca | Florentine/Southern

Deposition | van der Weyden | Flemmish/Northern

Three Avenues of Analysis

  • Media
  • Culture
  • Philosophy

Note: These are just 3 examples of ways to analyze artworks.
You may see other additional ways to approach this.

Comparative Analysis:

Media

Tempera Paint

Tempera Paint Ingredients

Oil Paint

Egg Tempera vs Oil Paint

Comparative Analysis:

Culture

Flanders

  • Powerful Merchant class
  • Materialism
  • Influenced by Aristotle

Florence

  • Aristocratic Nobility
  • Idealism
  • Influenced by Plato

Comparative Analysis:

Philosophy

Plato

Aristotle

  • Separates Form from Matter
     
  • Math as model for Pure Thought
     
  • Transcendental
     
  • Intuition over Logic
     
  • "Overcoming" the physical world
  • Matter & Form are inseparable
     
  • Grounds theories in Biology
     
  • Imminent
     
  • Logic as foundational
     
  • Discovering the order of the world

Visual Studies

Analysis & Visual Culture

The study of the visual aspects of culture, including:

  • Art
  • Design
  • Media
  • Everyday objects

and how they shape and are shaped by
social, political, and cultural contexts.

Also studies how images, objects, and visuality communicate meaning & influence social dynamics.

Insofar as we live in a culture whose technological advances abet the production and dissemination of such images at a hitherto unimagined level,
it is necessary to focus on
how they work and what they do,
rather than move past them too quickly to the ideas they represent or the reality they purport to depict.

In so doing, we necessarily have to ask questions about technological mediations and extensions of visual experience.

Martin Jay on the Importance of Visual Studies & Literacy

Semiotics

The study of signs and symbols, and how they communicate meaning through visual and cultural codes.

Visual Studies Terminology

Representation

The way in which images, objects, or ideas are depicted or portrayed, often reflecting and reinforcing cultural values, ideologies, and power structures.

Gaze

The way in which the viewer's perspective is constructed and influenced by cultural, social, and power dynamics, such as the male gaze or colonial gaze.

Visual Rhetoric

The use of visual elements to persuade or influence an audience, often employed in advertising, propaganda, and political imagery.

Visual Literacy

The ability to interpret, analyze, and create visual messages.

Surveillance

Monitoring and regulation of individuals and populations through visual technologies and practices, which can reinforce racial and social hierarchies.

Visuality

The structures and power relations of looking, being seen, and vision in society.

Liberty Leading the People

Eugène Delacroix
1830 CE | Oil on canvas

The Barricade (Memory of Civil War)

Ernest Meissonier
1850 CE
Oil on canvas

Liberty Leading the People (Romanticism)

The Barricade (Realism)

Mona Lisa

Leonardo da Vinci
c. 1503–1505 CE
Oil on wood

Approx. 30” x 19”

Mona Lisa in its current display at the Louvre

Mona Lisa (Prado)
Workshop of Leonardo da Vinci | c. 1503-1516

Mona Lisa (original)
Leonardo da Vinci | c. 1503-1505

Untitled
(I shop therefore I am)

Barbara Kruger

1987 CE

Untitled

Barbara Kruger

Date unknown (late 20th-century)

Untitled

Barbara Kruger

1987 CE

Chivalry

Frank Bernard Dicksee

1885 CE

"Damsel in Distress"

A character type, trope, and/or theme where a primary female character must be rescued by the usually male  hero, often due to her own inability.

The Knight Errant

John Everett Millais

1870 CE

Triple X Rancho

Allen Anderson

1941 CE

You're seeing less than half the picture

The Guerrilla Girls | 1989 CE

Two Thirds

The Guerrilla Girls | 1988 CE

Advantages

The Guerrilla Girls | 1985 CE

Guerrilla Girls wearing their signature Gorilla Masks

Do Women Have to be Naked to Get into the Met. Museum?

Guerrilla Girls

1989 CE

Applied Visual Studies:

John Berger

“To be naked is to be oneself.
To be nude is to be seen naked by others and yet not recognized for oneself. A naked body has to be seen as an object in order to become a nude.

(The sight of it as an object stimulates the use of it as an object.)

Nakedness reveals itself.

To be on display is to have the surface of one's own skin, the hairs of one's own body, turned into a disguise which, in that situation, can never be discarded.

The nude is condemned to never being naked. Nudity is a form of dress.”

Nudity is placed on display.

To be naked is to be without disguise.

John Berger, Ways of Seeing, 1972 CE

Sleeping Venus (a.k.a. The Dresden Venus)

Giorgione & Titian

c. 1510 CE | Oil on canvas

Venus of Urbino

Titian | 1538 CE | Oil on canvas

Examples of the "Venus Pudica" pose

Grande Odalisque

Ingres

1814 CE | Oil on canvas

Odalisque

Delcroix | 1825 CE | Oil on canvas

We are deep in the Orient – an exciting, erotically charged world of harems and hashish – and the lady is an odalisque, the concubine of a sultan, a woman kept for the purposes of male pleasure.

-Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge

Odalisque

Delcroix

Grande Odalisque

Ingres

Olympia

Manet | c. 1863 CE | Oil on canvas

"Olympia" Destroys Convention

Olympia

Manet

Venus of Urbino

Titian

Portrait (Futago)

Yasumasa Morimura | 1988 CE | Photography

Sleeping Venus

Venus of Urbino

Portrait (Futago)

Olympia

Grande Odalisque

Odalisque

End of Intro