The Visible and the Invisible: On Seventeenth-Century Dutch Painting
The book addresses the scientific debates on Rembrandt, Metsu, Vermeer, and Hoogstraten that are currently taking place in art history and cultural studies. These focus mainly on the representation of gender difference, the relationship between text and image, and the emotional discourse. They are also an appeal for art history as a form of cultural studies that analyses the semantic potential of art within discursive and social contemporary practices. Dutch painting of the seventeenth century reflects its relationship to visible reality. It deals with ambiguities and contradictions. As an avant-garde artistic media, it also contributes to the emergence of a subjectivity towards the modern “bourgeois”. It discards subject matter from its traditional fixation with iconology and evokes different imaginations and semantizations - aspects that have not been sufficiently taken into account in previous research. The book is to be understood as an appeal for art history as a form of cultural science that analyses the semantic potential of art within discursive and social contemporary practices, and, at the same time, demonstrates its relevance today. Works by Rembrandt, Metsu, Vermeer, Hoogstraten, and others serve as exemplary case studies for addressing current debates in art history and cultural studies, such as representation of gender difference, relationship between text and image, and emotional discourse.
"1121957961"
The Visible and the Invisible: On Seventeenth-Century Dutch Painting
The book addresses the scientific debates on Rembrandt, Metsu, Vermeer, and Hoogstraten that are currently taking place in art history and cultural studies. These focus mainly on the representation of gender difference, the relationship between text and image, and the emotional discourse. They are also an appeal for art history as a form of cultural studies that analyses the semantic potential of art within discursive and social contemporary practices. Dutch painting of the seventeenth century reflects its relationship to visible reality. It deals with ambiguities and contradictions. As an avant-garde artistic media, it also contributes to the emergence of a subjectivity towards the modern “bourgeois”. It discards subject matter from its traditional fixation with iconology and evokes different imaginations and semantizations - aspects that have not been sufficiently taken into account in previous research. The book is to be understood as an appeal for art history as a form of cultural science that analyses the semantic potential of art within discursive and social contemporary practices, and, at the same time, demonstrates its relevance today. Works by Rembrandt, Metsu, Vermeer, Hoogstraten, and others serve as exemplary case studies for addressing current debates in art history and cultural studies, such as representation of gender difference, relationship between text and image, and emotional discourse.
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The Visible and the Invisible: On Seventeenth-Century Dutch Painting

The Visible and the Invisible: On Seventeenth-Century Dutch Painting

by Daniela Hammer-Tugendhat
The Visible and the Invisible: On Seventeenth-Century Dutch Painting

The Visible and the Invisible: On Seventeenth-Century Dutch Painting

by Daniela Hammer-Tugendhat

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Overview

The book addresses the scientific debates on Rembrandt, Metsu, Vermeer, and Hoogstraten that are currently taking place in art history and cultural studies. These focus mainly on the representation of gender difference, the relationship between text and image, and the emotional discourse. They are also an appeal for art history as a form of cultural studies that analyses the semantic potential of art within discursive and social contemporary practices. Dutch painting of the seventeenth century reflects its relationship to visible reality. It deals with ambiguities and contradictions. As an avant-garde artistic media, it also contributes to the emergence of a subjectivity towards the modern “bourgeois”. It discards subject matter from its traditional fixation with iconology and evokes different imaginations and semantizations - aspects that have not been sufficiently taken into account in previous research. The book is to be understood as an appeal for art history as a form of cultural science that analyses the semantic potential of art within discursive and social contemporary practices, and, at the same time, demonstrates its relevance today. Works by Rembrandt, Metsu, Vermeer, Hoogstraten, and others serve as exemplary case studies for addressing current debates in art history and cultural studies, such as representation of gender difference, relationship between text and image, and emotional discourse.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783110423044
Publisher: De Gruyter
Publication date: 03/10/2015
Series: Edition Angewandte
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 340
File size: 6 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Daniela Hammer-Tugendhat, Institute of Art History, University of Applied Arts, Vienna, Austria
Daniela Hammer-Tugendhat, Institut für Kunstgeschichte, Universität für angewandte Kunst Wien, Österreich.

Table of Contents

Preface. - Part I: Visible becomes Invisible. Gender Construction in Rembrandt's Works: On Female Representation or on the disappearance of male protagonists from the field of representation. On Male Representation or on the disappearance of female protagonists from the field of representation. Asymmetry. Gender Relations in the Field of Sexuality. Summary. - Part II Invisible becomes Visible. Painting, not Mimesis: Mirror, Mirror on the Wall ?…: Woman before the Mirror by Frans van Mieris. The Picture within the Picture or Conveying the world through media: Woman Holding a Balance by Vermeer. Farewell to Lessing's Laocoon: Leaving behind a Methodological Dispute: Gabriel Metsu's A Woman Reading a Letter. The Gender of Letters. Affect / Emotion / Imagination. - Literature. - Illustrations.
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