Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

E-raamat: Art History Now: Objects, Concepts, Approaches [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

  • Formaat: 516 pages, 97 Halftones, color; 38 Halftones, black and white; 97 Illustrations, color; 38 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Dec-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781003563693
  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
  • Hind: 295,43 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Tavahind: 422,05 €
  • Säästad 30%
  • Formaat: 516 pages, 97 Halftones, color; 38 Halftones, black and white; 97 Illustrations, color; 38 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Dec-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781003563693
"This volume presents definitive essays by internationally-renowned experts and innovative younger scholars on the wide range of approaches used by art historians past and present to analyze images, objects, buildings, and performances. It provides critical considerations of key methodologies, from formalism and iconography to social history and psychoanalytic approaches. It foregrounds fundamental concepts, from the artist, the beholder, and the frame to museums, canons, and periodization. At the same time, it broadens art itself as a category by considering photographs, digital media, performance, architecture, and visual culture more generally. The chapters also explore new approaches and new points of view that have expanded Art History's remit in exciting ways in recent years by addressing growing interest in race, ethnicity, and the legacies of colonialism; gender identity and sexuality; eco-critical approaches to making and consuming art; materiality and the senses; digitally-informed methods; thenascent field of disability studies; and scientific research on vision and on the technical analysis of works of art. This comprehensive collection will be indispensable for students and scholars of Art History, as well as for readers coming from other disciplines who are seeking fresh approaches to visual and material culture"-- Provided by publisher.

This volume presents definitive essays by internationally-renowned experts and innovative younger scholars on the wide range of approaches used by art historians past and present to analyze images, objects, buildings, and performances. This comprehensive collection will be indispensable for students and scholars of Art History.



This volume presents definitive essays by internationally-renowned experts and innovative younger scholars on the wide range of approaches used by art historians past and present to analyze images, objects, buildings, and performances.

It provides critical considerations of key methodologies, from formalism and iconography to social history and psychoanalytic approaches. It foregrounds fundamental concepts, from the artist, the beholder, and the frame to museums, canons, and periodization. At the same time, it broadens art itself as a category by considering photographs, digital media, performance, architecture, and visual culture more generally. The chapters also explore new approaches and new points of view that have expanded Art History’s remit in exciting ways in recent years by addressing growing interest in race, ethnicity, and the legacies of colonialism; gender identity and sexuality; eco-critical approaches to making and consuming art; materiality and the senses; digitally-informed methods; the nascent field of disability studies; and scientific research on vision and on the technical analysis of works of art.

This comprehensive collection will be indispensable for students and scholars of Art History, as well as for readers coming from other disciplines who are seeking fresh approaches to visual and material culture.

Introduction: Art History Thenand Now Part I: The Objects of Art
History
1. Material: Engaging with the Stuff of Art
2. Architecture:
Constructing Global Histories
3. Photography: Between Discipline and
Indiscipline
4. New Media: Time Comes Again
5. Performance: Art is Alive
6.
Reproductions: Art Historys Images
7. Frame: Border, Boundary, Limit
8.
Technical Studies: Where Science meets Art Part II: Art Historical Concepts
9. Artist: Functions and Forms of History and Subjectivity
10. Beholder:
Absorption, Objectification, and the Reconstitution of Subjectivity
11.
Museum: When is a Museum?
12. Canon: A Chinese Laocoön and the Process of
Canon Formation
13. Periodization: Must We Divide (Art) History into Periods?
14. Modernism: Critical Genealogies and Contemporary Possibilities
15.
Orientalism: Post-Colonialism, Time, and the Image
16. Visual Culture: Not
Just Another Name for Art History
17. The Senses: The Sensory Revolution and
Art History Part III: Approaches to Art History
18. Connoisseurship:
Invention, Abandonment, Reinvention
19. Form and Formalism: Problematic and
Inevitable
20. Iconology: Method and Movement
21. Social Art History: The
Doing and Un-Doing of a Discipline
22. Psychoanalysis: The Art of Trauma
23.
Gender/Sexuality: Sexual Difference and the Structure of Art (History)
24.
Race/Ethnicity: The Practices of Difference and the Politics of Marginality
in Art History
25. Global Art History: Post-Colonial Origins, De-Colonial
Futures
26. Anthropology: Playing with Dolls Art, Effigy, Agency
27.
Environmental Approaches: Expanded Perspectives, Differential Positions
28.
Disability Studies: Institutional Critique and Disability Art as an Heir to
Arts History
29. Neuroaesthetics: Is it just Brains, Beauty, and Babel?
30.
Digital Approaches: Do We Really Need Digital Art History?
Geraldine A. Johnson is Head of the History of Art Department at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Christ Church, Oxford. She has published widely on sculpture from the late Medieval period to the present day, gender and the visual arts, the history of photography, and the historiography of Art History. She co-edited the prize-winning Picturing Women in Renaissance and Baroque Italy and edited Sculpture and Photography: Envisioning the Third Dimension. She is also the author of Renaissance Art: A Very Short Introduction. Most recently, she co-edited Photo Archives and the Place of Photography (Routledge, 2025) and she is currently co-curating a major exhibition at Oxfords Ashmolean Museum on art and the senses in the global Early Modern period.