Monday, November 16, 2009

Burne-Jones: The Perseus Series by Caroline Arscott



You each will summarize 1-2 pages of the text in the comment section below. The breakdown is as follows:

Dixon Anderson - page 53 from 'The Subject..' to 55 'cybernetic capabilities'
Lindsay Bird - 53 from 'The oddity' to 57 'Morris's ornament'
Jonathan Chun - 57 from 'By this stage' to 58 'Craft or Technology'
Ari Citron - 58 from "A suit of Armor' to 60 "machine body'
Charlene - 61 from 'To find an equivalent' to 64 "modelled elements'
Rene Garcia - 64 from 'In looking' to 64 'land forces'
Galen Herbst de Cortina - 64 from 'Throughout' to 66 'Excluded'
Douglas Hom - 66 from 'The psychic alternatives' to 70 'the skin'
Yunica - 70 from 'We can look' to 72 'torn loose'
Karen Molina - 72 from 'In The Rock of Doom' to 74 'woman's form"
Thi Nguyen - 74 from 'what can we conclude' to 76 'fail altogether'
Ryan Roschke - 76 from 'The discussions' to 77 'as effete'.
Molly Sandick - 77 from 'The amalgamation' to 79 'portion of his body'
Sisi Shan - 79 from 'The timeframe' to 82 'slippery process'
Andrew Shu - from 82 'The extreme' to 83 'the sandals'
David Tang - from 83 'Burne-Jones's historicism' to 84 '1895'
Carmen Plascencia - from 84 'When Wells's' to 84 'own artwork
Gina Su - from 84 'Burne-Jones' to 85 'time travel'

By now you should have all read the article to make sure that you understand how your section fits into the argument and how it connects to previous and following paragraphs. Look up any words or terms you don't know. Some of the passages are really tricky and hard, and I don't expect you to know certain things, but I want you to do your best to really try to figure out what is being stated and argued or described in your particular passage. It will be a little like "exquisite corpses".

Your explanation should be no shorter than 250 words and no longer than 400 words.
Leave your response in the "Comments" section, (accompanied by enough of your name to identify yourself to me) before 12:30pm Tuesday, 17 November 2009.



Dixon Anderson

In this article about the Burnes-Jones Perseus Series, the author argues that his depitction of armour and metal in his paintings is focused on the connection between the human body and its metal covering, rather than the opposition of the two substances. He also explains that his paintings of Perseus are a study in the battle between asthetic fixed nature of its figures and the threat of their explosion into violent, sexualized action. In particular, he points to the pasted-on qualities of the people in the paintings. The distinct outlines and strong shading of figures compared to that of the background gives them the quality of appearing raised off the surface of the painting. The author argues that this adds to their separation from the scene and their frozen appearance. He also analyzes the strangely bodily qualities of Perseus' armor. He explains that in his earlier paintings his obsession with knights and their armour was shown by the skin-like, living qualities of the armour. He points to the contours of the armour to the knights body, the leather-like feathery pieces of the armour's plates and the red undersides of the armour. To further Burnes-Jones examination of the importance of metal the author points to his painting of The Merciful Knight and explains the positioning of Jesus and, in particular, the nail sticking out of his head, which is tipped with a bright star. Beyond the focus on metal in Burnes-Jones paintings, the author suggests that the artist is also interested in the transition of other materials, such as the wood of the crucifix in The Merciful Knight, into the body and skin of Jesus.

Lindsay Bird

Critics of The Broadstone of Honor were skeptical about the way Burne-Jones repesented the people's faces in the painting. They argue that the expressions and composition are consistent with medieval art that focuses more on beauty than accuracy. Even Burne-Jones's friend Edward Clifford was not comfortable with the way the artist depicted the scene noting that it was "odd". Despite critic's distaste for the painting's percision, they did find them beautiful.
Burne-Jones sought to create a ten painting series telling the story of Perseus, though only four were finsihed. The series was aimed at chronoligically depicting Perseus's journey as he and Minerva set out to slay Medusa. The four completed paintings are joined by two unfinished canvases at Stuttgart while ten watercolor images hang in the Southampson City Art Gallery. A series of cartoon drawings at Tate tell a slightly different story of Perseus that developed into the canvases as they are now. They also make use of William Morris's acanthus border design that were supposed to link all of the final canvases together.

Jonathan Chun

Burne Jones had mastered drawn the human body by the time he took the Perseus commission. He demonstrated such mastery by making many sketches to figure out how he wanted to compose each scene. Some of these sketches are on display in museums. Burne Jones also did an extensive study on armor, researching armor in the British Museum and sketched pieces from the Coutts Lindsay collection of armor. From this study he conceived his own idea of armor and asked his family to help him make 3-D models of it. His armor ideas strived to not be associated with any particular time period. Rather they were an amalgamation of disparate materials which as it turns out is helpful in forming an analogy for Burne Jones’ concept of a body in action. Specifically this concept posits the idea that a body in action is not a single pure crystal but actually several different things grafted together with technology. In relation to the previous paragraph this paragraph continues with the preparatory aspects Jones’ took upon accepting the Perseus commission. This paragraph sets up the next paragraph for a discussion of the many different materials and composite nature of armor and its relation to robots and cyborg. This paragraph describes how Burne Jones was already an expert in the human form and with his studies of armor he noted their composite nature. To the mix of materials in armor he added flesh and thus created this skin tight feathery armor we see in The Baleful Head. This armor of skin is explained in the author’s discussion of a pathological condition where the skin becomes the location of fantasy in narcissism. In narcissism the skin doubles and provides the narcissistic personality a false sense of invulnerability just like the thin gap ridden armor provides against a raging sea monster.

Ari Citron

In my section of the article, Caroline Arscott touches upon a “suit of armour” and what the true meaning behind it is. She states that when the suit of armour stands by itself it acts as a body double, like a “life-size puppet or robot.” Once a man puts on the armour then the figure can become many more possibilities, like a fictional or hypothetical person whose physical capabilities are much more than the normal human. She relates this form of a man to that of a splendid machine, in that one is able to fine tone the machine “and make as many knobs and joints and muscles about him” as one whishes. This body is made in terms of a man who is ready for war, having the presentation of a “hard, smooth and muscled” body. This male type of armour also exaggerates the male, emphasizing masculine traits of the body. The shield emphasizes the need to fight, by creating a body that can withstand anything. The shield also protects against castration, something that would take away a man’s dignity. Introduced to the reading is a picture of Arnold Schwarzenegger that is muscular and masculine. The picture is dark, exposes his muscles and violence. The author states how this picture represents the pervasiveness of the hyper-male body in modern American culture. This is our modern day “machine body” which is very similar to the past suit of armour used in war.

Charlene

Perseus is equivalent to the modern representation of a “machine-like” body of Shwarzenegger. In Perseus the Gorgon Slayer by W.J. Gordon, T.R. Spence illustrates Perseus as an adolescent. His figure is slender and not heavily built. However, the text promises the reader that Perseus will grow in strength and will posses characteristics of a champion: sturdy, truthful, brave, and bright.
Perseus’ strength is reflective of his accomplishments. Throughout the journey of Perseus, his appearance became more mighty as he defeats Medusa and the monster that threatened Andromeda. He is provided with tools that allows him to become more powerful. Athena gave Perseus a sword and a mirror to defeat Medusa and the sea nymphs gave him the helmet of invisibility, winged sandals, and a special pouch to hold Medusa's head. The equipment provided by Athena and the sea nymphs intensifies Perseus' strength and ability. Although Perseus is fully armored, his presence is not showing a combative and militaristic force. His armor is integrated to his figure and appears like a natural extension of his body. Burne-Jones depicts his heroes differently than the typical imperial hero with impregnable armors. He provides his heroes with an external protection that doesn't seem impregnable. The armor can be damaged and repaired and is flexible for daily use. Burne-Jones' depiction of the armor is beautified, removing its intended purpose. Burne-Jones focuses more on "pictorial space and setting and greater integration of the painting and modelled elements"(64). When the viewer looks at the painting, there is no indication of the armor’s usage, but rather the armor seems to only serve as an ornamentation of the body. He separates the idea of vision and touch. However, the viewer has to go beyond vision, and realize how the armor would feel if touched.

Rene Garcia

One’s understanding of Burne-Jones’s representation of the armored-body should expand beyond the observations of Theweleit; armors are more than representations of shields “against the troubling flow of internal desire, or of extend threats, or the filth associated with women.” Rather, armors can also be viewed in terms of its relation to war. The author states that “as long as armors serve a practical function, its development was governed by technological considerations and not fashion.” The author emphasizes Charles Boutell’s observations that the development and change of the armor as a practical function in war was dependent on the improvements of the offensive war arms. Furthermore, as the development of offensive arms increasingly improved to become weapons too powerful to rely solely on arms men and women could wear, so did the development of the defensive armor. Body armors ceased to become simple extensions of someone’s body, or as the author states: armors expanded beyond what “men are able to wear and endure,” but rather became a matching power of the offensive arms to protect against the fire power of new artillery equipment; such new innovations in destructive war machines and artillery spurred the development of a new subset of armors that expanded beyond the extensions of someone’s body; these new set of armors have come to include shielded armor vessels in sea and land. In essence, we are made aware that an armor is dynamic, constantly changing, made of multiple parts in order to suit different needs of protection, and is always the focus of intense technological effort and political attention.

Galen Herbst de Cortina

In my section of the reading, pages 64 to 66 from “throughout” to “excluded” Caroline Arscott describes Perseus’s armor in the painting The Baleful Head by Edward Burnes-Jones, 1866-1867. Previously Arscott described the function of armor throughout history, and explained that armor had been an important tool of war, a tool locked in a perennial arms race with offensive weaponry. Arscott informs the reader that armor had always been a symbol of masculinity, a second body and hard casing meant to match a well muscled body. She then goes on to contrast that ideal with how Burnes-Jones portrays Perseus’s armor. Arscott notes that Persues’s armor seems to be an amalgamation of many types of armor, potentially incorporating plate metal, chain armor, leather, and even linens. The armor has many gaps around the joints and seems to be either poorly designed or designed for maximum agility instead of defense. Arscott contrasts Perseus’s flimsy armor and his slight frame with the extremely solid background of the painting. The apple tree occupies much of the background and there is no space between the characters due to the three faces overlapping one another. Arscott points out that the initial criticism of the painting was how the painting was “claustrophobic” and that “air was excluded”.

Douglas Hom

Many people represent the Perseus myth with a focus on castration or fetishism. For example, in Freud’s essay on fetishism, he mentions the phallic dreadlocks on Medusa’s head and her stiffening gaze. The myth has also been interpreted as saving civilization from impending doom. Athena’s shield helps Perseus fend off Medusa’s gaze, and it represents a state of order. Similarly, the picture plane in The Baleful Head “protects” the viewer from her petrifying gaze. Thus, the Perseus myth can also be viewed as a struggle between civilized order and deadly chaos.

Burne-Jones, however, does not put much emphasis on Athena’s shield, but rather on Perseus’s sword and the other gifts. All of these objects are kept near his body, but are weakly held together, much like his metal armor. The physical armor, according to Theweleit, can be a metaphor for the ego. Anzieu, in The Skin Ego, studies the skin as a shield for the psyche. The skin has two “layers”, the external, protective layer, and the internal, vulnerable layer. Some psychological problems arise from confusion between these layers. For example, in narcissism, the person pretends that the two layers exist as a single impenetrable skin, which leads to vanity and an overblown ego. In contrast, masochism is the destruction of the skin.

Burne-Jones’s The Baleful Head examines the connection between the metal armor (representing the outer layer) and the soft skin. His depiction of Perseus wearing an organic-looking armor suggests that the two layers fused together to produce an invulnerable hero. However, the fragility and brokenness in the armor pieces seem to point in the other direction. He combines both of these elements in his painting.

Yunica

Caroline Arscott discusses how Perseus is depicted in the painting The Rock of Doom and The Doom Fulfilled by focusing on Perseus's armor. The metal of the leg guards have roughly hacked edges, such that the whole armor seems to have elasticity and stretchiness like lead, silver or tin does rather than iron or steel, and to form a layer and hug over the body. The wallet containing Medusa’s head that Perseus carries has clearly been cut with a knife and seems to be all-leather or partly cloth, but when it shields the Gorgon's head, it also appears to be hardened like a breastplate. The comparison between the armor and the wallet leaves the viewer uncertainty about which is, or was, the top layer, that the dark mounds and segments of the armor present to us the overlapping muscle pads of a more fully anatomized specimen. These paintings are depiction of a heroic male of strength and bravery. The armors serves as defense against internal desire or external threats. In The Rock of Doom and The Doom Fulfilled, the armor and the wallet appears to be flexible in hardness. The armor can either be as hard as steel or as soft as silver. This kind of flexibility convinces us the armor is not just an appendage on the surface of the male body, but rather a part of the body. The armor is like the skin over the body and Perseus is presented as the subcutaneous muscle.

Karen Molina

In the section from page 72 from 'In The Rock of Doom' to page 74 'woman's form,’ Arscott mainly describes the how Perseus and Andromeda’s body are reconfigurable in “The Rock of Doom,” “The Death of Medusa,” and “The Doom Fufilled.” According to Arscott, Perseus’ armor is very tight against his skin, almost like his armor is his own flesh. Because of this, his armor has a quality of elasticity and can be reconfigured.

Also, Arscott makes a reference to Andromeda, Perseus, and the serpent as layers of the skin and body. Andromeda is the intact skin, Perseus is the subcutaneous muscle, and the serpent is the viscera and organs. This is characteristic of Burne-Jones’ imagination and how he was able to paint Perseus and Andromeda the way he did.

In the two paintings, Andromeda is painted to be “seamless.” Arscott argues that Andromeda’s body is reconfigurable and that her “seamlessness” attributes to her internal power of the characterization of women as a flow of desire for men. In “The Death of Medusa,” Andromeda’s torso is twisted, but the viewer does not see the same fractures like the armor or Perseus because her skin is flexible. Andromeda’s type of reconfiguration contrasts Perseus’ reconfiguration.

There was also a dilemma over the woman form and armor. It was said by William Morris that a woman’s body can be found in a man’s armor. Breastplates of men’s armor looked like they were made for women. The motif behind this is that women are reconfigurable through metal, and through flesh.

In all paintings, Arscott argues that the overall idea in the paintings is reconfiguration. There is a difference between the reconfiguration between man and woman. For men, mainly Perseus, reconfiguration is seen through armor. For women, like Andromeda, reconfiguration is seen through the rearrangement of the woman fleshy body.

Thi Nguyen - 74 from 'what can we conclude' to 76 'fail altogether'

Ryan Roschke

Caroline Arscott begins this passage by identifying each metal's possession of a unique hardness, malleability, ductility, toughness, etc. Arscott then describes different tests conducted on these metals, such as the ability of a projectile to puncture or crack any single metal. These tests varied differently based on the metal used for the armor and how the armor was constructed. In the 1860s, armor was made by sandwiching wood between two plates of metal, usually wrought iron. This was considered soft armor compared to the armor later made with steel plates, called hard armor.

According to Arscott, it is also worth noting that the speed, rotation, lightness of figure is just as important as impenetrability. However, in the present day, armor such as this does not project the heroic masculinity it used to. As armor grew more obsolete in the modern culture, Arscott states that "the metaphors and adjectives that are applied to the new guns and projectiles can indeed be used to summon up a hero's body for the modern day. The armed body that is intimated in this writing is composite, complex, fragile, [and] possibly dead in its effectiveness" (77). In this quote Arscott shows how the heroic figure never dies, but modes to describe it do. In this instance, the heroic figure can no longer be applied to an armored person, but instead a gun used by a powerful, masculine figure in warfare.

At the end of this section, Arscott talks about Armstrong's description of these weapons as delicate, and an anonymous commentator's assertion that these descriptions aren't accurate at all because it is "the most beautiful thing" (77).

Molly Sandick

This section starts off by explaining the technique by Edward Burne-Jones made the armor appear metallic. This technique is called gesso and involves applying plaster directly to the wooden surface and the gilded. Burne-Jones also used to gesso technique in other works of art for things like acanthus leaves. This technique makes it appear as though the armor is fused with Perseus’ skin. A satirist compared the aesthetic of the technique to that of contemporary toy theatre characters to which children could affix tinsel and sequins. Arscott draws lots of parallels between the toy theatre characters, real actor, she image in the painting and the substance of the painting itself. The next part is about how even flimsy toy artillery or armor are still involve a skill of assembly. The writer continues to make parallels between the hero’s body, armor and artillery; however these metaphors are often convoluted. Weapons can tear apart flesh in the same ways that they tear apart buildings and ships. The mechanism of function of a gun is not so different than that of the person or object which it is destroying. An equilibrium exists; the gun is a body already pierced by a bullet, it then expels this bullet so another body can take the bullet in. The gun is preemptively scarred by the bullets. Arscott asserts that this is like the cyborg in the Terminator because he has to cut through-destroy- his flesh in order to repair his mechanic parts. The terminator is pieced together and torn apart in the same way that the relationship between man and artillery involves a constant piecing together and tearing apart on both side. Thus weapons are an extension of us.

Sisi Shan

There is an idea or theme of a body that is pieced together. In the previous passage, Arscott discusses the idea of metals bending, contorting, and being pieced together to function as a whole, specifically through the example of a gun. However, if the metal pieces were to malfunction, they would fly apart disastrously. This idea is also explored in the nineteenth-century culture. The body is compared to the gun; there is a reversed process of coming apart, instead the body includes torn fragments that are reassembled, which makes the soldier not an unspoiled living body but a dead-alive body. If we look at the Perseus series by Burne-Jones, we can notice that the series is made up of many parts that conform to the idea of a reassembled body. The surface of the painting is literally built up of distinct segments. Philip Burne-Jones reveals that his father would lump up brighter portions of the painting first, patting it on and ragging it over to completely cover the warp and woof of the canvas to form very physical surfaces that would be dried before final glazes were applied. The finished product gives the viewer a sense of the constructional emphasis in building up substance in the picture. Burne-Jones even contemplated placing thin sheets of metal onto the canvas to represent armour and be painted over, though the idea was not successful. Burne Jones incpororated metallic paint in his paintings to accent some parts of the surface. Not only would the just the soldier be dead-alive, but the picture itself would be grafted together. A passage from Georgiana Burne-Jonse’s Memorials records Burne-Jones’s sorry over the surface of his oil paint in 1873 when he was painting Merlin and Nimue. He explained to his patron that he would have to start the painting again after finding out paint was flaking off in patches. Burne-Jones incorporates the theme of a secured body into many of his paintings, primarily with armor. The coming apart of the paint is analogous to the disintegration of the humane body, particularly his own. He discusses the building of a body, from bones to flesh, from flesh to skin, from skin to another skin. After the correct procedural building of this body, he would comb its hair and send it off in the world. If the order is reversed, the outcome would not be wanted.

Andrew Shu

The passage begins at the end of a description of how Burne-Jones paid a great deal of attention to the surface of his painting. In particular, he paid attention to how well the materials attach to the canvas, and how the materials represent the varying textures he is interested in. After realizing the painting would not last, he "constructed [the] replica painstakingly, this time in oil paint which would be more robust". The author then describes the wide political spectrum that Burne-Jones is connected to: The Perseus series is created for a key conservative (Arthur Balfour) who is responsible for rearming Britain for World War 1. And yet, around this same time, he also collaborated with those at the liberal opposite to Arthur. Then finally, he describes the ways the winged sandals and helmet of invisibility are portrayed in an unconventional manner which makes this this series an unconventional historical series. The passage was basically at a transition point between two sections: the first associates the interest in powerful modern military tools that were prevalent in his time period with the sort of fantastic variety of textures found surrounding Perseus' gear. He discusses his experimental techniques in different painting medium. The beginning of the passage supports this claim that he is interested in material and texture by describing his distress at the disentigrating paint. Then, he briefly discusses political influence. His final paragraph goes on to describe how his portrayal of textures and other techniques introduce the concept of time travel in his historical paintings.

David Tang

The previous paragraph mentions how Burne-Jones’s art takes the viewer into the mythic past. His style was a form of time travel, and the author uses the first two films of the Terminator series as a way to help compare and explain Burne-Jones’s artwork. “The film dramatizes the distinction between the Schwarzenegger android, the T-800 who works mechanically, and the T-1,000 which works digitally” (83). This is highly reminiscent of some of the ideas presented earlier, with the new weapons and guns coming in. Arscott continues the comparisons to the guns and the artwork by talking about how “Schwarzenegger can be disassembled and repaired or modified, like a puppet, but the T-1,000 can be reconfigure electronically like a piece of computer graphics”. Earlier the author mentioned that the many new parts to a gun were related to how Burne-Jones painted the parts of Perseus’s armor. Then, Arscott continues by paralleling the two androids to Perseus and Andromeda. Perseus and Andromeda also represent the current state of technology at that time. Perseus represents more of the current technologies, and he is perhaps a bit like the T-800. Andromeda, on the other hand, represents the shift that electrical power and electronics will soon bring. Again, the author mentions guns and other arms by informing the reader that “William Armstrong, the arms manufacturer, was the first individual to install hydroelectric power in his house”. He also “set up a hydroelectric system to run an arc light”, where he connected up a “mechanical, water-driven system to an electrical one”. The union of these two is like putting together Perseus, Andromeda, and the monster together. The paragraph then transitions by introducing H.G. Wells’s The Time Machine, which would fully allow the viewers to view the picture as traveling through time.

Carmen Plascencia - from 84 'When Wells's' to 84 'own artwork

Gina Su

Burne-Jones's is praised for his mastery at creating intricate detail, especially in armor and bodily contour. Though he is able to depict a body in action fairly accurately, Burne-Jones's work also tells a story with an "unfamiliar version of narrative."
For example, Burne-Jones would work while in the presence of being told a story by his studio assistance Thomas Rooke. However, Burne-Jones would not require him to read directly from a book, but instead requires Rooke to tell the story as he remembered. In this fashion, Burne-Jones would receive an "imperfect form of recollection" which he then renders in his work. This technique enables Burne-Jones to mirror the natural process of story telling which includes a distortion of interpretations over time. Similar to the children's game "telephone," Burne-Jones' finished artwork is a collaboration of the past and the present.
Burne-Jones’ creative process closely resembles the novel, “The Time Machine” by H. G. Wells, in that time and space exist in conjunction. The main character in the story stays within a small area in space, but travels to great lengths in time. In his painting, The Doom Fulfilled, Perseus is frozen delicately in space and time, though what happens before or after is based on the viewer.
Burne-Jones’ received much criticism on his painting, The Doom Fulfilled, for its lack of representation of violence and action. However, others argue that the painting is more of an ode to detail, craftsmanship, and an overall decorative aesthetic vision.
With his unrealistic depiction of intense action, Burne-Jones creates a "cybernetic fantasy" that allows viewers to appreciate separate elements, such as, counter f the bodies, the scene of a story, and of course, the beauty of decorative ornaments in the hero's armor.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Presentation Times Sign Up

Here are the times available for presentations. NOTE: NO ONE can be late or absent on presentation days. No excuses short of severe personal injury or a LOCAL terrorist attack!

Your presentation should be 12 minutes long with 3 minutes for questions. You should choose PART of your paper to READ - better to choose a part you are having trouble with than to choose a perfect part, because your peers can help your strengthen your argument or descriptions. (Practice reading the part of your paper that you wish to present to make sure it is 12 minutes long.)

Dec. 1 presentations:
12:40-12:55 Ari
12:56-1:11 Carmen
1:12-1:27 SiSi
1:28-1:43 Dixon (by default)
1:44-1:59 Ryan

Dec. 3 presentations
12:40-12:55 Karen
12:56-1:11 Thi
1:12-1:27 Lindsay
1:28-1:43 Molly
1:44-1:59 Gina

Dec. 8 presentations (+ last day to turn in re-writes)
12:40-12:55 Galen
12:56-1:11 Andrew
1:12-1:27 Jonathan
1:28-1:43 Yunica
1:44-1:59 Douglas

Dec. 10 presentations
12:40-12:55 Rene
12:56-1:11 Charlene
1:12-1:27 David

1:28-1:43 Follow-up questions as a whole
1:44-1:59 Course Evaluations

Sign up in the comments below - check the comments to make sure your time is still available.

Love, joni

(joni adds the names from time to time up here to make it easier to see what's left. However, she's not always around, patrolling this site. It is your responsibility to look below to make sure someone else hasn't chosen the time you want)

Monday, November 9, 2009

Sign up for individual conference times



There is no class this coming Tuesday. Instead, you are required to meet with me privately for 20 minutes to turn in your bibliography and to discuss your final paper project. I will be at Le Petit Cheval which you can see in the picture above. It is on Bancroft and Bowditch, right across the street from Urban Outfitters.

You should list your preferred time below in the comments. I am unlocking the comments so that you might immediately see which times have already been taken. This is first-come first-served. There are a few times on Thursday if that works better for you. I will have your papers for you to pick up. If you cannot meet on Tuesday you can still drop by to pick up your paper.
Love joni

AT STRADA (BANCROFT AND COLLEGE): LOOK FOR ME! I'T A BIG PLACE!
Thursday : 10 :30-10 :50 DAVID
Thursday : 10 :50-11 :10 YUNICA
Thursday : 11 :10-11 :30 KAREN


Le Petit Cheval (Bancroft and Bowditch (across from Urban Outfitters)
Thursday : 2 :10-2 :30 CHARLENE
Thursday : 2 :30-2 :50 LINDSAY
Thursday : 2 :50-3 :10 ANDREW

THURSDAY : 3:40-4:00 THI
THURSDAY : 4:00-?? RYAN

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

"Bruegel's Macchia" by Hans Sedlmayr
















What points or observations does Sedlmayr make that we also made in class on Tuesday? What things in the picture did Sedlmayr convince you to see that you hadn't seen previously? Do you agree with Sedlmayr's analysis?

I would also like you to explain what Sedlmayr means by "Macchia" -- what is Macchia and how do we experience it?

After answering these questions, you should find at least 10 sentences that are strictly formal descriptions of a particular painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder. Do not include any sentence where Sedlmayr interprets what he sees. Similarly, do not include sentences where Sedlmayr is speaking broadly about Bruegel's paintings and images in general. If a sentence is divided up by a ";" or ":" or a connecting word like "similarly", "instead", etc., and there seem to be two separate observations within the compound sentence, you may count these as 2 sentences.

Number your entries 1.-10. Type the sentence. Give the page number where you found the sentence.

You submission should look something like this (without reusing my examples):

1. The round cakes covering the roof at the upper left of Netherlandish Proverbs do not follow the sharp spatial shift of the roof's surface. (327)

2. Instead [the round cakes] remain, regardless of the bend in their support, unforeshortened and on the same unified plane as the disintegrating figures. (327)


Come prepared to talk about the article, because it is an important article (and one of my very favorite art-historical readings of all time)

Leave your response in the "Comments" section, (accompanied by enough of your name to identify yourself to me) before 12:30pm next Thursday, 1 October 2009.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Heinrich Wölfflin : Principles of Art History



For this blog post you will provide links to two online images, not mentioned in the reading, that you consider to be examples of artworks displaying "Open" and "Closed" Form and explain why you have chosen these two images.

Leave your 200 (or more) word response in the "Comments" section, (accompanied by enough of your name to identify yourself to me (by checking the box marked "Name/URL")) before 12:30pm next Tuesday, 22 September 2009. No late blog entries will be accepted.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Erwin Panofsky, Perspective as Symbolic Form



Why does Panofsky say that Perspective is a Symbolic Form? What does he say this "Form" is "Symbolic" of?

Leave your 300 (or more) word response in the "Comments" section, (accompanied by enough of your name to identify yourself to me (by checking the box marked "Name/URL")) before 12:30pm next Thursday, 17 September 2009. No late blog entries will be accepted.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Giorgio Agamben “The Open: Man and Animal”



What do you suppose is the primary connection between Koerner's discussion of Caspar David Friedrich's art and Agamben's discussion of Jakob von Uexküll's ideas of the "Umgebung" and "Umwelt"?

Leave your 300 (or more) word response in the "Comments" section, (accompanied by enough of your name to identify yourself to me (by checking the box marked "Name/URL")) before 12:30pm next Thursday, 10 September 2009. No late blog entries will be accepted. (For real this time!!)

Friday, September 4, 2009

Rubens: Supplemental information...


Above is a painting of Saint Veronica by Hans Memling.


And this is "Sancta Veronica Ierosolymitana which the Vatican Museum declares to be the oldest picture of Jesus. A Syrian text from Kamulia in Cappadocia from the 500s tells us that the image was "drawn out of the water" and "not painted by human hand." (read more here)

You can also read about Saint Veronica on the Wikipedia

This is the "Shroud of Turin":

Which you can read more about on the Wikipedia

This is part of the (terrible) movie "The Passion of the Christ" - it is very violent and bloody, but if you are interested it will give you some idea of the moment in the story of Jesus that Rubens' is depicting in his oil sketch: You can see how differently the artist and the director approach the telling of the story.



Veronica appear about 9 minutes and 44 seconds into this clip if you want to fast forward...

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Caspar David Friedrich and the Subject of Landscape by Joseph Leo Koerner (1990)

^click on image for clearer view.

Art historians (and others) consider the opening chapters of Joseph Leo Koerner’s book “Caspar David Friedrich and the Subject of Landscape” to contain some of the best examples of formal description in all of art-historical writing. Koerner’s painstakingly detailed and yet lyrical formal descriptions of a few paintings and sketches provide the basis for his larger argument. Koerner shows how formal elements in the painting hold their own as evidence equal to historical and philosophical evidence gathered from written texts.

You should read these chapters slowly, while looking carefully at the images. Reading an essay is not a scavenger hunt to be attended to with repetitive swipes of the yellow highlighter, marking off ground already searched as you look for answers to questions. Neither are you looking for a dead body in the woods. Instead, you are looking at the forest itself – to see how the various forms in the forest co-exist and commingle and overlap. You are looking at an ecosystem in which all parts both comprise, and exist within, the whole.

Leave your 200 (or more) word response in the "Comments" section, (accompanied by enough of your name to identify yourself to me (by checking the box marked "Name/URL")) before 12:30pm next Thursday, 3 September 2009. No late blog entries will be accepted.
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Questions:

1. What, according to Koerner's argument is the "Subject of Landscape"?

2. Does he answer this question explicitly anywhere in the essay?

3. Cite a sentence / passage where Koerner SHOWS the relationship between the subject and landscape using a painting or drawing etc..

4. What one specific question did you wish to have answered after reading this article?
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N.b. I will post images from the Koerner article as .jpgs, on bSpace under the "Resources" tab. These images, some of which are in color, this will aid you in your looking, thinking, and writing.


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Jonathan Chun said...

Koerner argues that the “Subject of Landscape”, as mentioned explicitly in the final paragraph, is “always only almost visible”. Furthermore he contends that it is this quality, which then turns the focus of the landscape to the viewer and our location in relation to the image. Ultimately then we, the viewer including our notions of the import of the image, are the subject of landscape.

In the first paragraph of Chapter 2 beginning with “Yet stationed at the center…” Koerner illustrates the relationship between the subject and the landscape by describing how an we the viewer hope for an interior representing shelter from a harsh nature upon seeing the possibility of an entrance to the hovel. This agrees with his explicit statement about how the almost visible subject of lanscape, in this case the possible interior reveals our own subjectivity the desire for refuge.

I wanted to know what is the meaning of the “dissolution” as used when Kroeber refers to it several times in Chapter 2? My best guess is that dissolution here means a gradual fading of the hovel, as if bits of it were disappearing into the background. Maybe if we could get an image of Hut in the Snow the definition would be more apparent?

Camille Roque said...

According to Joseph Leo Koerner in "The Subject of Landscape", the true subject of Caspar David Friedrich's landscape paintings could be anything that the viewer sees. In Friedrich's writings about his own work, he says that his landscapes would relate back to religion. This might seem relevant when one sees subtle objects such as a church in the foggy distance of "Winter Landscape with Church". However, Koerner states that the subject of Friedrich's landscapes could all depend on the viewer's subjectivity and what they see in the landscape; thus their views and thoughts may not always relate to religion. Koerner explains his point when he states, "The subject of landscape, what Friedrich's canvases are finally about, remains always only almost visible...[such as] the fog that wraps the Church's base [in "Winter Landscape with Church" and] the mute firs that conceal their symbolic significance. [T]hese often function to turn the landscape back on the vewier, to locate us in our subjectivity as landscape painting's true point of reference" (20). Koerner believes in the individual's ability to capture their own ideas about the landscape they see in front of them. This gives rise to the question if Koerner believes this because he is unreligious himself.

Wenwan Li (Yunica) said...

According to Koerner's argument, I think the "Subject of Landscape" is the viewer’s experience. I could not find the place where the author answers what the “Subject of Landscape” is explicitly in the essay. But when he talks about the painting “From the Dresden Death”, he says that the thicket is “unremarkable”, and he also talks about how the objects in a landscape serve as a linkage between the viewer and the landscape. Thus I think the subject of landscape is not the most visible object in a picture but the viewer’s experience.
When the Koerner describes the hovel in “Hut in the Snow”, he says that “the hovel, hardly a hovel, decays into wilderness, appearing scarcely built at all, rotting wood enclosing an overgrown and hollow mound. Yet stationed at the centre of the canvas, and affording a dark place of entrance for our gaze... The hovel, that is, offers a vision of dwelling that halts the subject in his passage through the landscape, contrasting with his wandering the condition of arriving at and remaining in a place.” The canvas relates the landscape to the viewers by providing “entrance for our gaze” and the viewer’s passage, making the viewers feel themselves a witness to the scene.
For some painting like "Winter Landscape with Church", a person is drawn in the picture and the painting shows a experience of that person. Does it relate the viewer to the landscape by making the viewer feel that they are the person in the picture?

Dixon Anderson said...

Dixon Anderson

Koerner argues that the goal of Friedrich's paintings is the illuminate the true subject of these mundane portraits of nature, the viewer. He suggests that without the viewer's own perception of the portrait as a space in which they, the viewer, are present, it loses all value as a work. Koerner also asserts that Friedrich painted simple, unspectacular scenes to show that God or some divine force is present in all things. Even the benign, boring landscapes were in fact breathtaking in their own right. For example, the intracacies of the pattern of alder branches in From the Dresden Heath II, is a detail Friedrich clearly wants the viewer to focus on. Koerner continues to claim that the landscape is not the subject of the painting but that the viewer is the subject of the landscape, and that the viewer is placed in the space of the painting and gives the painting its perspective. The painting's meaning is garnered from the viewer's own experience, an experience of remembering a scene, or recalling a place visited momentarily. Without the viewer the painting would not be.

Galen Herbst de Cortina said...

Koerner makes a long, elaborate, and over the top argument to come to a simple (intellectually simple not necessarily easy to pick out simple) seeming conclusion in his book “Caspar David Friedrich and the Subject of Landscape”. He meanders through several different paintings by Friedrich, all of which follow the general motif of a barren winter scene which somehow appeals to the person viewing it, stopping them in their tracks to witness the stark and bleak glory that is this particular sight, all the while observing that there is no real way to tell at what perspective you are standing in relation to the scene. This then turns out to be Koerner’s key revelation, the fact that a lack of perspective makes the person inspecting the painting is in fact the subject and hence the reason why all of the paintings seem to almost lean in towards the observer. Even in the paintings with a human in the form of a hunter or weary traveler the painting is still designed to draw the viewer in; to make them feel as though that moment caught on canvas is there just for them, a moment unspoiled by others. Koerner’s genius is in the simplicity of the conclusion, not the long and perhaps overly drawn out process of discovery.

I hope my laggy internet didn't double post this.

David Tang said...

Koerner argues that the “Subject of Landscape” in Friedrich’s art is not what is pictured in the landscape, but what cannot be seen. An example would be the emotions the pictures evoke in its viewers, or an idea that it represents. Even though all the viewer sees in Snow Covered Hut is a hut with some trees, the subject is really the “at-homeness” feeling one gets from the hut. He answers the question in the last paragraph stating, “The subject of the landscape, what Friedrich’s canvases are finally about, remains always only almost visible”. In Winter Landscape with Church, it is “the fog that wraps the Church’s base, the mute firs that conceal their symbolic significance: these often function to turn the landscape back on the viewer, to locate us in our subjectivity as landscape painting’s true point of reference”. A question that I would like to see answered is whether his definition of the “subject of landscape” only applies to Friedrich’s works. If not, then why did Koerner specifically chose Friedrich to base his argument on? With so many other artists out there painting landscapes, what made Friedrich different? Does he draw using a specific style that others didn’t?

montooner said...

The subject of the landscape is Friedrich's search for divinity within nature. He belongs to the Romantic class of painters, who place emphasis on describing real--as opposed to idealized--experiences. This first chapter describes the pair of paintings of fir trees as the description of the artist's experiences during a stroll in a specific time and place. Koerner describes evidence that Friedrich discovered the subject of the fir tree paintings 21 years before the actual execution of the piece. This means that he kept the experience in his mind, and had a considerable amount of time to mull over the visual elements that best describe the experience. The second chapter describes Friedrich's Romantic interest in nature as a mode through which he expresses his religion. Koerner summarizes this interest in the first paragraph on page 16: "One answer..., yet the religious intention in Friedrich's art is unmistakable." He immediately gives an example: "The artist one remarked about his painting 'Swans in the Rushes'...". Upon reading this article, I wanted to know: what contemporary artists or ideas in his life caused him to take nature so seriously as the medium for expressing religiosity? Also, I found the analysis fascinating in the detail and well argued points about the viewer's unclear relation to the fir trees in the painting. To be honest, it initially seemed like tasteless clutter (but maybe partially it was the quality of the prints). --Andrew Shu

Molly said...

Koerner states the subject of Freidrich's landscape as deriving a Christian, spiritual essence from an otherwise mundane, ubiquitous image. Though the viewer may initially see simply what is before him, he or she will eventually transcend the obvious and derive religiousmeaning. Kroener states that the subject of these landscapes is, "a gathering of symmetries...In the way... fir grove and church, nature and art, faith and salvation are perfectly paired,Freidrich dramatizes in the landscape the reciprocity that should come before it." I, personally, am not good at recognizing Christian implications in art unless they are explicit. Thus, this explanation was quite perplexing to me. I would like to know how a layperson could look at a painting of nothing more than a cluster of fir trees, devoid of any indication of human presence, and see a church. I know that I would never have drawn that conclusion on my own. Is there a cultural/historical context tham makes drawing transcendental, religious themes, (or at least coming up with the explanation Koerner provides), from these paintings more intuitive?

Charlene G. said...

Koerner states that the subject of landscape is the viewer. The positions, shapes, and arrangements of the objects depicted in the picture somehow places the viewer in the landscape. In illustration 2, Fir Trees in the Snow, the asymmetry and randomness of the objects in the picture, frame the gaze of the viewer. “The grove becomes a frame for your gaze, a natural altarpiece with you as its single, consecrated object” (8). In addition, the picture provides the viewer a space where they can picture themselves in. “…the fir trees gather about a concave foreground that surrounds you, establishing you as the grove’s potential centre” (9). The viewers see themselves being depicted in the picture as though what they see are something they have already experienced and are moments within their lives. A sense of belonging is felt in the viewers as they study the landscape and they feel that they are the subjects. Belonging will only disappear the moment a subject appears in the scene. Also, according to Koerner, due to Friedrich’s only almost visible subject of landscape, “the fog that wraps the church base, the mute firs that conceal their symbolic significance”, allow the viewers to be “landscape painting’s true point of reference” (20).

Gina said...

Gina Su

According to Koerner's argument, the "Subject of Landscape” can almost be anything because, “Somehow the painting places you (5).” He explains that the subject of a painting comes from the experiences of the audience and therefore can reflect many different ideas. However, Koerner comes to the conclusion that the "Subject of Landscape” is the promise of Christian faith.

Koerner does not answer this question explicitly anywhere in the essay, though he does mention that “the subject of landscape “remains always only almost visible (20).”

An example where Koerner shows the relationship between the subject and landscape using a painting or drawing is when he explains that the fir grove is especially shaped to house a crucifix. He compares the shrubbery in the center of a painting to be “ The vision of the Church(17). “ He continues, “we shall learn to say, discovers the fir grove as a symbol of the divine, even as the carved crucifix already uses nature for it ministry (17).“

After reading this article, I was so engulfed in Koerner’s analysis of the painting that I began to overlook its simplicity. Is it possible that writers are overanalyzing images just to serve a purpose or prove a point? I would want to ask Koerner, “What if the artist simply just wanted to paint trees in the winter?”

Karen Molina said...

1. According to Koerner's argument, the "Subject of Landscape" is "only almost visible." He argues that Freidrich's art uses subtle clues like fog to function as a way for the viewer to look back at the landscape so as to locate ourselves as the "landscape painting's true point of reference."

2. Yes Koerner's does answer this question explicitly at the end of the second chapter.

3) Koerner shows the relationship between the subject and landscape in the reading, "From the Dresden Heath," in the following passage about the painting "Trees and Bushes in Snow."

"You seek entrance to that which commands your attention. The scene becomes an extension of yourself, a buried meaning, an experience half-remembered, or what you will. You believe that because this is a painted scene, it is somehow for you, and that insignificant nature, represented, will have a bearing on your own life. Frozen in your passage before the canvas, however, like a moth drawn towards a flame, you discover your kinship with the canvas: object among objects."

4. One specific question I wished to have answered after reading this article is:

Why couldn't Koerner directly tell us that that the "From the Dresden Heath" paintings were organized in a way to have a religious meaning in the first chapter instead of waiting to the second chapter to explain the symbolic significance of the painting and just have us fully believe that the painting was basically just an experience that a painter drew just for an experience?

John said...

John Huang

Koerner states that the “subject” of landscape would be that “display of you to yourself in your various orientations toward the things you see, the spaces you inhabit and the infinities you desire.” I take this to mean that the artwork that we see before us, was created based on the impression that the artist had at the moment but whose true meaning lies to “accommodate and frame your gaze.” Koerner’s characterization of works by Friedrich is mainly found to be reflective of how the scene is posed to an individual. In some cases such as “Trees and Brushes in the Snow” compared to “Fir Trees in the Snow”, the former specifically “singles you out to stand before a thicket” while the latter “embrace you.” In the second chapter of the book, Koerner shifts his prospective of the landscape from the audience’s point of view towards how the idea(s) that the artist might have wanted to communicate through his audience. It is noted that Friedrich’s works holds many underlying Christian themes and that he wanted to incorporate his own beliefs into the artwork. I found the religious aspects of Friedrich most apparent when Koerner mentioned that in the Swans in the Rushes it seems as though Friedrich painted this “dark surface of the canvas, which [refuses] entrance, keeps us outside looking in.” This ideology of a hidden religion is very widespread as each landscape portrait is never completely opened or exposed but rather secluded and cut off, denying the audience further visual scenery besides that could be seen in the foreground. Thus I have found Koerner to say that the subject of landscape is whatever emotions or ideas the audience can think of, but continent on the artist’s own desires to share what he has seen or feels.

Douglas Hom said...

According to Koerner, the subject of landscape is the artist’s experience. It is, however, not the immediate experience that is conveyed, but a delayed memory. During the period between the encounter and the expression, time alters the experience, causing some aspects to be forgotten. What remains is a remnant of the original. Although the painting may now differ significantly from experience, it represents what was most memorable and striking. For example, in the paintings From the Dresden Heath, trees and shrubs take center stage in the foreground. The background, obscured from view by fog, is thus rendered somehow less important than the ordinary trees. Koerner believes that this suggests the subject of the landscape is something beyond the confines of the painting – it is the artist’s personal experience.
He further argues that the subject of landscape is the relationship “between landscape painting and its sacral meaning, between you and the painted object of your gaze.” (p. 19) Koerner adds, “the resolution achieved in Winter Landscape with Church maps one trajectory of that experience in which the human subject, once hunter, then spiritual seeker, ends his search in God… the wanderer’s perspective, internalized into the structure of the painting-as-experience, has now become our own.” (p. 19) Thus, it is not merely the artist’s delayed memory of an experience that is the subject of landscape, but also the meaning behind that particular experience, and the communication of it to the observer.
Koerner provides a very reasonable interpretation of the paintings described in the text. I could imagine another art historian having a completely different view. My question would be: how often do they agree on a particular interpretation, and what makes one interpretation better than another?

Carmen said...

According to Koerner’s argument the “Subject of the Landscape” is the artist of the painting. Towards the end of his first chapter, Koerner states that the artist is “the implied subject of the landscape, i.e. its initial viewer and its ultimate theme”. This is to say that the artist becomes the subject of the landscape, not the object painted, because it is through their experience and their interpretation that the audience sees the painting. The subject, what is most important, of the landscape in the painting is the perspective through which the painting is experienced and not the object itself. These images though based on real experiences, however, are not direct translations of the landscape. They are more of personal expressions and abstractions of an experience by the artist. A combination of reality obtained directly from the landscape and an abstraction from the perspective through which the landscape is seen and interpreted. By the time that the audience sees the painting, they are seeing an object through the experience, the perspective of the artist. We learn that these paintings are based on pauses or moments in time that the artist experiences, as seen from their perspective. This occurs in the “Trees and Bushes in the Snow” painting, 1828, where Koerner writes that the painting “captures this particular thicket as seen by a unique observer from a single spot in space”, that is to mean from the perspective of the artist. The painting is a representation of the “artist’s lived experience” and their interpretation of the landscape.

Ryan Roschke said...

1. According to Koerner, the "Subject of Landscape" is always meant to be just out of reach. He comments that we are to recognize ourselves and our subjectivity as the landscape's true point of reference.
2. Although he does not answer the question directly anywhere in the essay (at least not that I could discern), he asserts on page 19 that Friedrich "dramatizes in the landscape the reciprocity that should occur before it: between landscape painting and its sacral meaning, between you and the painted object of your gaze."
3. While critiquing "From the Dresden Heath," Koerner implies that the "artist, who is the implied subject of the landscape, i.e. its initial viewer *and* its ultimate theme, wanders upon the Dresden heath, halting occasionally before views of remarkable nature. The canvases represent the content of these pauses, although not in the manner of images produced immediately in the landscape" (11).
4. Can we be sure that the religious images portrayed by Freidrich are meant as symbols of organized religion? What if Friedrich is trying to convey that life itself is a religion? That, perhaps, we should find religion and in nature, and spend our lives getting as close to it as possible?

Tiana Hampton said...

According to Koerner’s argument, the “Subject of Landscape” refers to the artist and his experiences within a certain setting. Koerner makes this rather explicit in the first chapter of his novel, when he chooses to discuss From the Dresden Heath, in which he states: “The artist, who is the implied subject of the lanscape, i.e. its initial viewer and its ultimate theme, wonders upon the Dresden heath, halting occasionally before views of unremarkable nature.” He goes further to talk about the relationship between the subject and landscape on page 10, using From the Dresden Heath as an example. Koerner argues, “In the painting of the alder thicket, Friedrcih conjoins an extreme randomness of detail with a centralized and symmetrical overall design in order to assert that the pattern of branches silhouetted against the sky captures this particular thicket as seen by a unique observer from a single spot.” Koerner is arguing that the landscapes that Friedrich chose to depict are as unique and individual as the subjects themselves, not generic landscapes that he conjured from his mind, but actual landscapes that he found in nature. However, the way Koerner phrases his argument is a source of confusion for me. When Koerner says the “Subject of Landscape,” does that mean the same thing as the “subject of THE landscape”? Does it make a difference which phrase is used?

Xiangming Li said...

In his essay on "The Subject of Landscape", Koerner begins by suggesting that the subject of the landscape has to do with faith and the search for salvation. He discusses the perfect pairing of “the viewer and the work of art, fir grove and church, nature and art” etc. In the landscapes mentioned by Koerner, each one depicts a scene of nature which is recreated by the viewer and was encountered on his journey towards seeking God, always during a moment of transition, where something lies in the distance, “almost visible”. In that sense, the viewer never finds out what Friedrich’s canvases are “finally” about. Whether it’s the fog wrapped around the church or the firs, which block almost all visibility, the subject is always hidden. Koerner says that the purpose of this is to “turn the landscape back on the viewer, and to locate us in our subjectivity as landscape painting’s true point of reference”. Thus, by not having a clearly visible subject, Friedrich can use to landscape to incorporate a divine presence, one that cannot be illustrated by something concrete. In these landscapes, the artist places the viewer in an intermediary location.

Rene Garcia said...

Joseph Koerner’s essay, “From the Dresden Heath,” places new focus to what many would perceive to be simple pictures of snow-covered trees, buried among the snow landscape. According to Koerner, the subject of the landscape is the artist himself stating that “it’s initial viewer and its ultimate theme, wanders upon the Dresden Heath, halting before views of unremarkable nature.” This is what the author would perceive as the “experience” of the image, the placement of the artist in front of the thicket through a “journey of inhospitable nature.” One could argue that there are hidden meanings, or reasons, for the artist among the thicket and the snow. Utilizing these analogies, as the thicket as a source of meaning for the artist, Koerner implies that the artist is the subject of the landscape. For example, Koerner writes “You are placed before the thicket. You seek entrance to that which commands your attention. The scene becomes an extension of yourself, a buried meaning, an experience half-remembered, or what you will. You believe that, because this is a painted scene, it is somehow for you.” I believe Koerner provides a valid insight to the artist’s depiction of the Dresden Heath. However, one question I wish Koerner would have answered is: how is it that the Dresden Heath is not a part of the artist’s experience and rather tied to some other philosophical meaning beyond that of the human experience?

SiSi said...

1. What, according to Koerner's argument is the "Subject of Landscape"?
The “Subject of Landscape”, in Friedrich’s case, is the visibility of elements in his paintings that are symbolic or later symbolic of religious meaning. Friedrich’s winter landscapes are not paintings about observing winter nature or works describing a history or accomplishment. Initially the “Subject of Landscape” cannot be fully seen and realized until Friedrich’s later paintings of 1811 tie together previous paintings as well. Once the viewer has seen a series of his artworks, the viewer may then see the “Subject of Landscape” as artworks about the visibility and presence of what we see, and what they conceal in terms of their symbolic significance. It is also about the experience of the artist and the painting and the viewer confronted with the painting.
2. Does he answer this question explicitly anywhere in the essay?
Yes, he answers this question explicitly in two parts of the essay. On page 19, he writes “Friedrich dramatizes in the landscape the reciprocity that should occur before it: between landscape painting and its sacral meaning, between you and the painted object of your gaze.” On page 20, Koerner also writes, “The subject of landscape, what Friedrich’s canvases are finally about, remains always about only almost visible.”
3. Cite a sentence / passage where Koerner SHOWS the relationship between the subject and landscape using a painting or drawing etc..
On page 19, Koerner writes, “…the resolution achieved in Winter Landscape with Church maps one trajectory of what experience in which the human subject, once hunter, then spiritual seeker, ends his search in God… the wander’s perspective, internalized into the structure of the painting-as-experience, has now become our own.”
4. What one specific question did you wish to have answered after reading this article?
I’m still slightly confused as to the “Subject of Landscape”. Originally I thought this was referring to the object of study in the landscape painting itself. Is this also meant to be taken as “we”, the viewers, are also the subjects of the landscape painting itself as we are subjects of its experience and its projection of itself onto us?

arielle said...

According to Joseph Leo Koerner, “The Subject of Landscape,” is all about the viewer. He speaks about many different paintings by Friedrich, all of which are lifeless and dreary. Koerner repeatedly describes the paintings as dull and unsophisticated, yet he believes, it is how “the painting places you.” Koerner portrays the viewer and his or her location, as the real subject of landscape, and draws meaning from the human mind. Although paintings may not have traces of human existence, Koerner states, “the intensity with which it fixes on its motif, and in the way it arrests the viewer…fashions about itself a humanizing plot.” Koerner believes paintings that do not capture the viewer, lose all value of importance. The subject of the landscape is truly one that is not visible to the naked eye. It is something within our minds that lets our imaginations take us to a place that we create using a painting. One of the main questions I had was why Koerner focused on paintings by Friedrich? Are there other meanings behind it? I also wonder why he focuses on lifeless art? It would be interesting to see his views on more modern art and how they shape the viewer’s landscape.

SiSi said...

1. What, according to Koerner's argument is the "Subject of Landscape"?
The “Subject of Landscape”, in Friedrich’s case, is the visibility of elements in his paintings that are symbolic or later symbolic of religious meaning. Friedrich’s winter landscapes are not paintings about observing winter nature or works describing a history or accomplishment. Initially the “Subject of Landscape” cannot be fully seen and realized until Friedrich’s later paintings of 1811 tie together previous paintings as well. Once the viewer has seen a series of his artworks, the viewer may then see the “Subject of Landscape” as artworks about the visibility and presence of what we see, and what they conceal in terms of their symbolic significance. It is also about the experience of the artist and the painting and the viewer confronted with the painting.
2. Does he answer this question explicitly anywhere in the essay?
Yes, he answers this question explicitly in two parts of the essay. On page 19, he writes “Friedrich dramatizes in the landscape the reciprocity that should occur before it: between landscape painting and its sacral meaning, between you and the painted object of your gaze.” On page 20, Koerner also writes, “The subject of landscape, what Friedrich’s canvases are finally about, remains always about only almost visible.”
3. Cite a sentence / passage where Koerner SHOWS the relationship between the subject and landscape using a painting or drawing etc..
On page 19, Koerner writes, “…the resolution achieved in Winter Landscape with Church maps one trajectory of what experience in which the human subject, once hunter, then spiritual seeker, ends his search in God… the wander’s perspective, internalized into the structure of the painting-as-experience, has now become our own.”
4. What one specific question did you wish to have answered after reading this article?
I’m still slightly confused as to the “Subject of Landscape”. Originally I thought this was referring to the object of study in the landscape painting itself. Is this also meant to be taken as “we”, the viewers, are also the subjects of the landscape painting itself as we are subjects of its experience and its projection of itself o

Anonymous said...

SiSi

1. What, according to Koerner's argument is the "Subject of Landscape"?
The “Subject of Landscape”, in Friedrich’s case, is the visibility of elements in his paintings that are symbolic or later symbolic of religious meaning. Friedrich’s winter landscapes are not paintings about observing winter nature or works describing a history or accomplishment. Initially the “Subject of Landscape” cannot be fully seen and realized until Friedrich’s later paintings of 1811 tie together previous paintings as well. Once the viewer has seen a series of his artworks, the viewer may then see the “Subject of Landscape” as artworks about the visibility and presence of what we see, and what they conceal in terms of their symbolic significance. It is also about the experience of the artist and the painting and the viewer confronted with the painting.
2. Does he answer this question explicitly anywhere in the essay?
Yes, he answers this question explicitly in two parts of the essay. On page 19, he writes “Friedrich dramatizes in the landscape the reciprocity that should occur before it: between landscape painting and its sacral meaning, between you and the painted object of your gaze.” On page 20, Koerner also writes, “The subject of landscape, what Friedrich’s canvases are finally about, remains always about only almost visible.”
3. Cite a sentence / passage where Koerner SHOWS the relationship between the subject and landscape using a painting or drawing etc..
On page 19, Koerner writes, “…the resolution achieved in Winter Landscape with Church maps one trajectory of what experience in which the human subject, once hunter, then spiritual seeker, ends his search in God… the wander’s perspective, internalized into the structure of the painting-as-experience, has now become our own.”
4. What one specific question did you wish to have answered after reading this article?
I’m still slightly confused as to the “Subject of Landscape”. Originally I thought this was referring to the object of study in the landscape painting itself. Is this also meant to be taken as “we”, the viewers, are also the subjects of the landscape painting itself as we are subjects of its experience and its projection of itself o

Thi Nguyen said...

The “Subject of Landscape,” in Koerner’s essay, is the viewer’s personal experience of God and religion. On page 15, he states that “Friedrich empties his canvas in order to imagine, through an invocation of the void, an infinite, unrepresentable God.” According to Koerner, God is an omnipresent being that is “almost visible” (page 19) to the viewers. Yet in the end, it is left to the individual observer to use his imagination to find God and construct his own religious experience. In Koerner’s description of the first picture, he states “The thicket’s placement at the very centre of the canvas… only intensifies the caesura between the mundane and particularized foreground in which you exist and an entirely indeterminate and potentially infinite background.” (page 5) By describing the background as “indeterminate and potentially infinite” Koerner suggests a sense of grandness and a feeling of ambiguity to convey God’s presence and the observer’s uncertainty of it. Yet by emphasizing the individual’s position in the painting by mentioning “the particularized foreground in which you exist,” Koerner depicts the viewer as having an active role in the scheme of the painting, which connects the experience of the viewer to the landscape. Thus, not only did the artist include references to God in his work, but he also allowed viewers to bring in their personal experience and religious interpretation as well.