Results for 'Caravaggio'

58 found
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  1.  5
    Caravaggios Judith und Holofernes: Phänomenologische Bemerkungen über die bildliche Erzählung.Paolo Spinicci - 2024 - Phenomenology and Mind 26 (26):150.
    Caravaggio’s Judith and Holofernes demonstrates a phenomenologically relevant aspect of pictorial narrative. On the one hand, each part can only be understood if it is arranged in a temporally extended narrative. On the other hand, the fixity of the moment it presents to the viewer is essential. It is a duality that characterises pictorial narrative and, in this painting, proves essential to understanding its subject: a first-person narrative of death.
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  2.  35
    Caravaggio's Complexion: The Humoral Characterization of Artists in the Early Modern Period∗.Christopher Allen - 2008 - Intellectual History Review 18 (1):61-74.
    (2008). Caravaggio’s Complexion: The Humoral Characterization of Artists in the Early Modern Period∗. Intellectual History Review: Vol. 18, Humanism and Medicine in the Early Modern Era, pp. 61-74.
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  3.  18
    Caravaggio’s The Crucifixion of St. Peter - Spectatorship, Martyrdom and the Iconic Image in Early Modern Italy.Simen K. Nielsen - 2024 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 12 (2):11-64.
    This paper explores conflations of martyrdom, spectatorship, and image theory in Caravaggio’s Crucifixion of St. Peter (1601). It argues that Caravaggio employs an “iconic” visual formula as a response to the pressures of a post-Tridentine poetics. Through these strategies, an iconography of immediacy and presence is paired with a sacrificial subject-matter. This merging united witness and visual experience in the shape of the sacred image. Martyrdom, as both a historical and representational phenomenon of early modern sociality and culture, (...)
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  4.  16
    Caravaggio’s Martha and Mary Magdalene in a Post-Trent Context.Daniel M. Unger - 2024 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 12 (2):87-109.
    In his painting of Martha and Mary Magdalene, Caravaggio depicted the two sisters of Lazarus as engaged in a serious conversation. On the one hand Martha is rebuking Mary Magdalene. On the other hand, Mary is responding in that she turns a mirror towards her older sister. The aim of this article is to elucidate how this reciprocal conversation reflects post-Trent propaganda. Martha represents a group of believers that remained within the Catholic Church but did not embrace the changes (...)
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  5.  17
    Is Caravaggio a queer theologian? Paul’s conversion on the way to Damascus.Luis Menéndez-Antuña - 2018 - Critical Research on Religion 6 (2):132-150.
    Queer theology has not paid enough attention to queer sex, how queers understand sexual intimate relationships outside hetero/homonormative frameworks, and more importantly, what notions of relationality with Otherness undergird those experiences and practices. This contribution exemplifies a trajectory of visualization—a theoretically based approach to reading art—where the practices of barebacking and cruising in queer subcultures trigger a reading of Caravaggio’s Conversion on the Way the Damascus that, in turn, reads the biblical text in terms of radical hospitality to Otherness. (...)
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  6. Caravaggio ei pittori dell'ispirazione.Francesco Saracino - 2005 - Gregorianum 86 (3):496-522.
    This essay considers, among other paintings, two of the most important of Caravaggio's works in reference to the theological debate concerning the inspiration of the Bible and of the Gospel of Matthew, a lively debate among contemporaries of the painter. The focus of the essay is to demonstrate a method for the analysis of figurative representations of religious themes. Liberating these works from the confines of art history, it analyzes them in the context of the Christian experience, as it (...)
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  7. Caravaggio's calling of st Matthew reconsidered.Angela Hass - 1988 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 51 (1):245-250.
  8. Caravaggio and His Two Cardinals. By Creighton E. Gilbert.F. Jacobs - 1998 - The European Legacy 3:136-136.
  9.  30
    Caravaggio, Empathy and Christ.Dan O’Brien - 2020 - Heythrop Journal 61 (3):437-446.
  10.  31
    Displacing Caravaggio: art, media, and humanitarian visual culture.Tijana Stolic - 2021 - Contemporary Political Theory 20 (3):135-139.
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  11.  26
    The Raising of Lazarus: Caravaggio and John 11.Amy Oates - 2007 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 61 (4):386-401.
    Combining art historical and biblical scholarship, this article examines John 11 to offer textual reasons for the unique motifs and composition in Caravaggio's Raising of Lazarus (1608–09) and to provide greater insight into the painting and its source.
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  12.  30
    Narrative and Temporal Ambiguity in Caravaggio and Rembrandt’s Supper at Emmaus.Michela Young - 2024 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 12 (2):111-139.
    Caravaggio and Rembrandt have often been considered together in light of their realism and use of chiaroscuro, as propounded in the 2006 exhibition “Caravaggio-Rembrandt”. This article explores another unifying characteristic of their paintings, ambiguity. By specifically considering the artists’ construction of narrative ambiguity in their first versions of The Supper at Emmaus, from their respective climates of Protestant Holland and Counter-Reformation Italy, it analyses the significance of the pictorial and temporal strategies employed for the exegesis of the Emmaus (...)
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  13. Vanitas. Lotto, Caravaggio, Guercino nella collezione Doria Pamphilj.Luciano Floridi (ed.) - 2011 - Rome, Metropolitan City of Rome, Italy:
     
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  14.  48
    Thoughts on Caravaggio.Michael Fried - 1997 - Critical Inquiry 24 (1):13-56.
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  15.  31
    The Effects of Viewing: Caravaggio, Bacon, and The Ring.Davide Panagia - 2007 - Theory and Event 10 (4).
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  16.  15
    Severed Representations in Caravaggio.Bernhard Stumpfhaus & Klaus Herding - 2004 - In Bernhard Stumpfhaus & Klaus Herding, Pathos, Affekt, Gefühl: Die Emotionen in den Künsten. Walter de Gruyter.
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  17.  16
    Observations on caravaggio's 'repentant magdalen'.Ilaria Toesca - 1961 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 24 (1/2):114-115.
  18.  32
    Beheadings and Self-Portraits in Caravaggio’s Work - The Faces of the Self-Awareness.Augustin Cupșa - 2024 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 12 (2):65-86.
    The present study aims to investigate the psychological mechanisms beneath the change in the facial expression of some of the beheaded characters in Caravaggio’s works, starting from The Head of Medusa, from the artist’s youth, and reaching David with the Head of Goliath, a mature workpiece, searching the continuity between them through a series of self-portraits/ self-insertions of the artist in his work. The psychodynamic analysis is limited by the constitution of its practice to the study of the process (...)
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  19.  25
    Crossing borders: Towards a cognitive aesthetic approach to Caravaggio and Beckett.Dario Del Degan - 2005 - Semiotica 2005 (157):65-82.
    When conducting interart studies, difficulty arises comparing art forms due to differences in discourse between genres. The problem becomes compounded when certain art works extend their mode of communication beyond the boundaries of their genre. Interpreting such works tends to result in subjectivist readings that cannot be justified according to any predetermined analytical model. Rather than negating the subjective response, this article proposes that an artwork is realized within the mind. In examining critical responses to Caravaggio’s painting ‘Beheading of (...)
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  20.  12
    Michael Fried. After Caravaggio. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2016. 234 pp. [REVIEW]Lorenzo Pericolo - 2018 - Critical Inquiry 44 (3):609-612.
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  21. The "crucifixion of st. Peter": Caravaggio and reni.Walter Friedlaender - 1945 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 8 (1):152-160.
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  22.  9
    Sex, Violence and Faith: The Art of Caravaggio.Amelia Arenas - 2016 - Arion 23 (3):35.
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  23.  36
    Queering a Gay Cliché: The Rough Trade/Sugar Daddy Relationship in Derek Jarman's Caravaggio.Niall Richardson - 2005 - Paragraph 28 (3):36-53.
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  24.  16
    To Destroy Painting.Louis Marin - 1995 - University of Chicago Press.
    The work of the eminent French cultural critic Louis Marin (1931-92) is becoming increasingly important to English-speaking scholars concerned with issues of representation. To Destroy Painting, first published in France in 1977, marks a milestone in Marin's thought about the aims of painting in Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A meditation on the work of Poussin and Caravaggio and on their milieux, the book explores a number of notions implied by theories of painting and offers insight into (...)
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  25.  33
    Baroque Science, Experimental Art? Jusepe de Ribera and other Neapolitan Sceptics.Itay Sapir - 2021 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 44 (1):26-43.
    Current attempts by historians of science to revise the narrative of the Scientific Revolution by using the concept of the Baroque have important implications for art history. Correspondences between baroque art and baroque science gain new complexity when the rational, epistemologically optimistic image of the New Science is put in doubt. Rather than a method of objective observation, early seventeenth‐century science and art share an acceptance of the constructed nature of reality, of human epistemological limitations and of the role of (...)
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  26.  35
    The political life of sensation.Davide Panagia - 2009 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    Prologue : narratocracy and the contours of political life -- From nomos to nomad : Kant, Deleuze, and Rancière on sensation -- The piazza, the edicola, and the noise of the utterance -- Machiavelli's theory of sensation and Florence's vita festiva -- The viewing subject : Caravaggio, Bacon, and the ring -- "You're eating too fast!" slow food's ethos of convivium -- Epilogue : "the photographs tell it all" : on an ethics of appearance.
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  27.  25
    The muses.Jean-Luc Nancy - 1996 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    This collection, by one of the most challenging of contemporary thinkers, asks the question: why are there several arts and not just one? This question focuses on the point of maximal tension between the philosophical tradition and contemporary thinking about the arts: the relation between the plurality of the human senses and sense or meaning in general. Throughout the five essays, Nancy's argument hinges on the culminating formulation of this relation in Hegel's Aesthetics and The Phenomenology of Spirit - art (...)
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  28.  29
    Me? The invisible call of responsibility and its promise for care ethics: a phenomenological view.Inge van Nistelrooij & Merel Visse - 2019 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 22 (2):275-285.
    Care ethics emphasizes responsibility as a key element for caring practices. Responsibilities to care are taken by certain groups of people, making caring practices into moral and political practices in which responsibilities are assigned, assumed, or implicitly expected, as well as deflected. Despite this attention for social practices of distribution and its unequal result, making certain groups of people the recipient of more caring responsibilities than others, the passive aspect of a caring responsibility has been underexposed by care ethics. By (...)
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  29. Pure Visuality: Notes on Intellection & Form in Art & Architecture.Gavin Keeney - manuscript
    Diaristic, mixed notes on: John Ruskin's The Poetry of Architecture (1837) and Modern Painters (1885); Caravaggio, Victorian Aesthetes, G.K. Chesterton, and Tacita Dean; Jay Fellows' Ruskin’s Maze: Mastery and Madness in His Art (1981); Slavoj Žižek at Jack Tilton Gallery, New York, New York, USA, April 23, 2009, “Architectural Parallax: Spandrels and Other Phenomena of Class Struggle”; “Titian, Tintoretto, Veronese: Rivals in Renaissance Venice”, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, March 15-August 16, 2009; Janet Harbord, Chris Marker: La (...)
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  30.  11
    The Crossing of the Visible.Jean-Luc Marion - 2004 - Stanford University Press.
    Painting, according to Jean-Luc Marion, is a central topic of concern for philosophy, particularly phenomenology. For the question of painting is, at its heart, a question of visibility—of appearance. As such, the painting is a privileged case of the phenomenon; the painting becomes an index for investigating the conditions of appearance—or what Marion describes as “phenomenality” in general. In The Crossing of the Visible, Marion takes up just such a project. The natural outgrowth of his earlier reflections on icons, these (...)
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  31. The Crossing of the Visible.James K. A. Smith (ed.) - 2003 - Stanford University Press.
    Painting, according to Jean-Luc Marion, is a central topic of concern for philosophy, particularly phenomenology. For the question of painting is, at its heart, a question of visibility—of appearance. As such, the painting is a privileged case of the phenomenon; the painting becomes an index for investigating the conditions of appearance—or what Marion describes as "phenomenality" in general. In _The Crossing of the Visible_, Marion takes up just such a project. The natural outgrowth of his earlier reflections on icons, these (...)
     
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  32.  41
    A Pound of Flesh: Lacan's Reading of The Visible and the Invisible.Charles Shepherdson - 1997 - Diacritics 27 (4):70-86.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:A Pound of Flesh: Lacan’s Reading of The Visible and the InvisibleCharles Shepherdson (bio)This cut in the signifying chain alone verifies the structure of the subject as discontinuity in the real.—Lacan, “Subversion of the Subject”This moment of cut is haunted by the form of a bloody scrap—the pound of flesh that life pays in order to turn it into the signifier of signifiers, which it is impossible to restore, (...)
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  33.  16
    Envisager Méduse. Condensation et métamorphose dans la Tête de Méduse de Caravage.Olivier Dubouclez - 2024 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 12 (2):141-175.
    Various elements suggest that not only Medusa’s beheading, but also her metamorphosis is present on the parade shield that Caravaggio painted in 1597-1598 and that his patron, Cardinal del Monte, offered to the Grand Duke of Tuscany, Ferdinando de’ Medici. Scholars have recently insisted that the famous rotella shares many features with an engraving by Cornelis Cort, now attributed to Antonio Salamanca, a possible copy of a lost work by Leonardo. Interestingly, this engraving comes with a description of Medusa’s (...)
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  34. Setting the stage for a dialogue: Aesthetics in drama and theatre education.Alistair Martin-Smith - 2005 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 39 (4):3-11.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Setting the Stage for a Dialogue:Aesthetics in Drama and Theatre EducationAlistair Martin-Smith (bio)For us, education signifies an initiation into new ways of seeing, hearing, feeling, moving. It signifies the nurture of a special kind of reflectiveness and expressiveness, a reaching out for meanings, a learning to learn.—Maxine Greene, Variations on a Blue Guitar1Examining the aesthetics of the complementary fields of educational drama and theatre is like looking through a (...)
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  35.  11
    (1 other version)The Madness of Vision: On Baroque Aesthetics.Dorothy Z. Baker (ed.) - 2013 - Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press.
    Christine Buci-Glucksmann’s__ _The Madness of Vision_ is one of the most influential studies in phenomenological aesthetics of the baroque. Integrating the work of Merleau-Ponty with Lacanian psychoanalysis, Renaissance studies in optics, and twentieth-century mathematics, the author asserts the materiality of the body and world in her aesthetic theory. All vision is embodied vision, with the body and the emotions continually at play on the visual field. Thus vision, once considered a clear, uniform, and totalizing way of understanding the material world, (...)
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  36.  13
    Three Ovidian Tails.Paul Barolsky - 2019 - Arion 26 (3):135-140.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Three Ovidian Tails PAUL BAROLSKY Kneeling at the edge of a pond in push-up position, a beautiful nude boy crowned with flowers gazes down at the water in which he beholds his reflection. In love, he is enthralled. Thus, the image of Narcissus rendered by the Florentine painter Alessandro Allori in a work that has been largely overlooked until recently. Datable to the second half of the sixteenth century, (...)
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  37.  24
    The supersensible in Kant's Critique of judgment.Julie N. Books - 2016 - New York: Peter Lang.
    In this close analysis of Immanuel Kant’s aesthetics in his Critique of Judgment, Dr. Julie N. Books, explains why Kant fails to provide a convincing basis for his desired necessity and universality of our aesthetic judgments about beauty. Drawing upon her extensive background in the visual arts, art history, and philosophy, Dr. Books provides a unique discussion of Kant’s supersensible, illuminating how it cannot justify his a priori nature of our aesthetic judgments about beauty. She uses examples from the history (...)
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  38. Edward W. Said.Paul A. Bové - 1998 - Duke University Press.
    This volume begins to show why the current period in humanistic studies could be known as "The Age of Edward Said." The collection brings together outstanding intellectuals from the wide variety of fields to which Edward Said, the most important humanist of his generation, has made contributions: literary criticism, postcolonial studies, musicology, Middle Eastern Studies, anthropology, and journalism. Featured is a new interview with Said, conducted by W. J. T. Mitchell, in which Said discusses the importance of the visual to (...)
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  39.  11
    The Madness of Vision: On Baroque Aesthetics.Christine Buci-Glucksmann - 2013 - Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press. Edited by Dorothy Zayatz Baker.
    Christine Buci-Glucksmann’s The Madness of Vision is one of the most influential studies in phenomenological aesthetics of the baroque. Integrating the work of Merleau-Ponty with Lacanian psychoanalysis, Renaissance studies in optics, and twentieth-century mathematics, the author asserts the materiality of the body and world in her aesthetic theory. All vision is embodied vision, with the body and the emotions continually at play on the visual field. Thus vision, once considered a clear, uniform, and totalizing way of understanding the material world, (...)
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  40.  57
    Art and its Canons.David Carrier - 1993 - The Monist 76 (4):524-534.
    My recent book, Principles of Art History Writing, presents and defends a relativistic theory of art history. That book describes the changing styles of acceptable interpretations of such artists as Piero, Caravaggio and David. The validity of an interpretation, I argue, must be judged relative to the standards of its time. At each time, there is a certain consensus about what kinds of interpretations are worth taking seriously. Because those standards change with the times, the interpretations admired by earlier (...)
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  41. L'image d'un Dieu qui passe. Lecture théologique de la Vocation de S. Matthieu de Caravage.A. Dall'Asta - 1997 - Recherches de Science Religieuse 85 (3):335-367.
    La peinture de Caravage occupe une position stratégique entre l'art religieux du XVIe siècle, dont le naturalisme, ainsi chez Carracci, est imprégné de présence divine, et le réalisme sécularisé qui triomphera au XIXe siècle. Aussi a-t-elle été l'objet d'incessants conflits d'interprétation, commencés déjà de son temps. Elle ne paraissait pas d'accord, en effet, avec les consignes d'orthodoxie données aux artistes par les théologiens de la Contre-Réforme, et clairement rappelées à Caravage dans le contrat qui lui avait été fixé en 1565 (...)
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  42.  14
    Destruir la pintura de Louis Marin.Juan Carlos Acosta Domínguez - 2022 - Revista de Filosofía (México) 54 (153):298-304.
    Destruir la pintura, resulta polémico y al mismo tiempo atractivo, debido a que ofrece un análisis de los conceptos Vorstellung y Darstellung desde un enfoque estético- pictórico, el cual toma la obra de Poussin y Caravaggio como principa- les objetos de estudio. Si bien, prima facie, estamos acostumbrados a pensar que los conceptos antes mencionados en filosofía suelen tener connotacio- nes e implicaciones epistémicas, lo que Louis Marin ofrece a lo largo de su estudio es un claro contraejemplo de (...)
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  43.  65
    The search for narrative.Laura Rachel Felleman Fattal - 2004 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 38 (3):107-115.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 38.3 (2004) 107-115 [Access article in PDF] The Search for Narrative Laura Felleman Fattal The most cursory cultural investigator cannot help but notice that the visual arts have become a significant source and impetus for the narrative of contemporary books, theater, and dance. In recent memory, the following theatrical and dance performances "Contact" by Susan Stroman and John Weidman, "Art" by Yasmina Reza, "Sunday (...)
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  44.  32
    The Tell-Tale Hand: Gothic Narratives and the Brain.Neil Forsyth - 2016 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 6 (1):96-113.
    The opening story in Winesburg, Ohio by Sherwood Anderson is called simply “Hands.” It is about a teacher’s remarkable hands that sometimes seem to move independently of his will. This essay explores some of the relevant contexts and potential links, beginning with other representations of teachers’ hands, such as Caravaggio’s St. Matthew and the Angel, early efforts to establish a sign-language for the deaf, and including the Montessori method of teaching children to read and write by tracing the shape (...)
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  45.  7
    The Invisible Dragon: Essays on Beauty, Revised and Expanded.Dave Hickey - 2012 - University of Chicago Press.
    _The Invisible Dragon_ made a lot of noise for a little book When it was originally published in 1993 it was championed by artists for its forceful call for a reconsideration of beauty—and savaged by more theoretically oriented critics who dismissed the very concept of beauty as naive, igniting a debate that has shown no sign of flagging. With this revised and expanded edition, Hickey is back to fan the flames. More manifesto than polite discussion, more call to action than (...)
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  46. Art as "Night": An Art-Theological Treatise.Gavin Keeney - 2010 - Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    Written over the course of two months in early 2008, Art as "Night" is a series of essays in part inspired by a January 2007 visit to the Velázquez exhibition at the National Gallery of Art, London, with subsequent forays into related themes and art-historical judgments for and against theories of meta-painting. Art as "Night" proposes a type of a-historical dark knowledge crossing painting since Velázquez, but reaching back to the Renaissance, especially Titian and Caravaggio. As a form of (...)
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  47. Dossier Chris Marker: The Suffering Image.Gavin Keeney - 2012 - Cambridge Scholars Press.
    This study firstly addresses three threads in Chris Marker’s work – theology, Marxism, and Surrealism – through a mapping of the work of both Giorgio Agamben and Jacques Derrida onto the varied production of his film and photographic work. Notably, it is late Agamben and late Derrida that is utilized, as both began to exit so-called post-structuralism proper with the theological turn in the late 1980s and early 1990s. It addresses these threads through the means to ends employed and as (...)
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  48.  41
    Art History in the Age of Bellori: Scholarship and Cultural Politics in Seventeenth-Century Rome.Giles Knox, Janis Bell & Thomas Willette - 2004 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 38 (2):116.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Aesthetic Education 38.2 (2004) 116-120 [Access article in PDF] Art History in the Age of Bellori: Scholarship and Cultural Politics in Seventeenth-Century Rome, edited by Janis Bell and Thomas Willette. Cambridge: Cambridge Universtiy Press, 2002, 396 pp. Giovan Pietro Bellori is a name familiar to all who have studied seventeenth-century Italian art. His magisterial book, The Lives of the Modern Painters, Sculptors, and Architects (Le vite (...)
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  49. Naturalism.Dr David Macarthur - unknown
    Naturalism is a term that stands for a family of positions that endorse the general idea of being true to, or guided by, “nature”, an idea as old as Western thought itself (e.g. Aristotle is often called a naturalist) and as various and open-ended as interpretations of “nature”. Since the rise of the modern scientific revolution in the seventeenth century, nature has increasingly come to be identified with the-worldas-studied-by-the-sciences. Consequently, naturalism has come to mean a set of positions defined in (...)
     
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  50.  43
    Betrayal: A Philosophy.Michael Marder - 2020 - Research in Phenomenology 50 (1):79-98.
    This essay imagines the shape a phenomenology of betrayal would assume at the limits of phenomenology. With Caravaggio’s 1602 painting Cattura di Cristo for an aesthetic backdrop, I consider the paradoxical structure of betrayal with its interwoven strands of a surplus disclosure and a breach of trust. I go on to elaborate the relation of this complex term, at once positive and negative, to time, conceptuality, and truth. Ultimately, I am interested in how betrayal as a limit of phenomenology, (...)
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