TOC Nov 26, 2020

21:Inquiries - Issue II

journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/xxi/issue/view/5168

Beate Fricke

2/2020 von 21:Inquiries into art, history and the visual. Beiträge zur Kunstgeschichte und visuellen Kultur ist erschienen.

Die Beiträge sind hier: https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/xxi/issue/view/5168
abrufbar. Wenn Sie einen Beitrag einreichen möchten - kontaktieren Sie uns bitte 21-inquiriesikg.unibe.ch - wir freuen uns über Ihr Interesse.

Beate Fricke, Ursula Frohne, Karen Lang, Karin Leonhard, Avionam Shalem, Michael Zimmermann und Katharina Böhmer (Redaktion) in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Team von Arthistoricum.net (Heidelberg)

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2/2020 of 21:Inquiries into art, history and the visual. Beiträge zur Kunstgeschichte und visuellen Kultur has been published.

The contributions are accessible here: https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/xxi/issue/view/5168
For submissions please contact us 21-inquiriesikg.unibe.ch, we are happy about your interest!

Beate Fricke, Ursula Frohne, Karen Lang, Karin Leonhard, Avionam Shalem, Michael Zimmermann and Katharina Böhmer (editorial office) in collaboration with the team of arthistoricum.net (Heidelberg)


TABLE OF CONTENTS

ISSUE #2 – 2020
Epistemic Images

INTRODUCTION
The Uncertainty of Epistemic Images
Alexander Marr & Christopher P. Heuer


ARTICLES

Ryff’s Acanthus. On Field Research in Renaissance Architecture
Elizabeth J. Petcu

Abstract:
This article proposes a new framework for examining the empirical research of early modern architects. It explores the rise of nature study in sixteenth-century architectural theory and practice through the works of physician and architecture expert Walther Hermann Ryff (c. 1500–1548). The article argues that Ryff’s 1548 Vitruvius Teutsch, the first German translation of Vitruvius’s De architectura, gave architects pathbreaking advice about performing design research in nature. Ryff’s book supported the botanical investigations of architects by aping empirically derived botanical imagery from the De historia stirpium of Leonhart Fuchs (1501–1566) and by comparing architectural nature study to the period craze for examining ancient ruins firsthand. In proposing a new mode of architectural empiricism, Vitruvius Teutsch reconciled tensions between abstract theory and hands-on practice in the formation of architectural knowledge.

Errant Images. Illustrating an Early Modern German Pliny
Christopher D. Johnson

Abstract:
This article contends that woodcuts in a partial German translation of Pliny’s Naturalis historia function as what Aby Warburg called Bilderfahrzeuge (image vehicles). Translated and compiled by Johann Heyden, illustrated by Jost Amman, Virgil Solis, and others, and published by Sigmund Feyerabend in 1565, 1571, and 1584, Bücher und schrifften von der Natur art und eigentschafft der Creaturen […] features “description” and “ornament,” but rarely epistemological rigor. Specifically, its zoological images are “true” for their aesthetic, pragmatic, and theological value. That most of these images previously appeared in other books published by Feyerabend, in Thierbuch Albert Magni (1545) and Gessner’s Historia animalium (1551–57), confirms their mobility was prized more than their accuracy.

Outstanding Ingenuity and Graphic Freedom. The Copernican ,Organon Astronomicon‘ of Jean I du Temps
Alexander Marr & Richard Oosterhoff

Abstract:
In the late sixteenth century, the French provincial lawyer Jean I du Temps of Blois (fl. 1570s–1590s) devoted countless hours to difficult forms of scholarship that wove together the cultures of letters and mathematics. Perhaps the most astounding product of his labour is a manuscript set of instruments for calculating the locations of the heavenly bodies: Organon astronomicon ex hypothesibus Copernici extructum (Astronomical instrument constructed from the hypotheses of Copernicus). Unusually, and as its title indicates, the work is based on the calculations that underpin Nicolaus Copernicus’ proposition of a heliocentric world system, published in his De revolutionibus (1543). This, as we shall suggest, bears on the manuscript’s distinctive aesthetic, whereby the data on which Copernicus’ provocative hypotheses rest are rendered both delightful and useful. In making his Organon, du Temps deployed cunning visual tactics to engage the reader, guiding them towards an appreciation both of the heavens’ mathematically ordered beauty and of his own ingenium.

The Envious Destroyer of All Things
Christopher P. Heuer

Abstract:
Time, which kills everything, obsessed early modern England’s architects as much as its playwrights. If for a distraught Macbeth, moments crept interminably, for Stuart and Tudor builders, time’s slog always threatened to end too soon. The inevitability of architectural death through slow ruin, or frenetic dismantling, took on particular verve in a polity with a history of iconoclasm. Architecture’s emphasis upon surface aligned building with (say) portraiture which, around 1600, carried its own rhetorics of time – and information – arrested. Both building and posing subsisted in the proffering of a good face, the warding off of bodily death. And in the case of this article’s focus – an ephemeral arch built in London in 1603 – this face – this façade – was threatened by unexpected epistemes of time: duration, instant, and epoch. These were temporalities in upheaval in Stuart London, a moment of unsteady power relations, of new kinds of printed publications, and of that most unpresentable of human phenomena: contagion.

Tales of Transformation. Hendrick Goltzius’s Allegory of the (Alchemical) Arts in the Kunstmuseum Basel
Christine Göttler

Abstract:
The rhetoric of secrecy played an important role in the early modern fashioning of painting as a specialized kind of knowledge about the visible and invisible worlds. This article explores Goltzius’s use of secrecy in regard to his largest and perhaps most enigmatic composition, which is also his only painted work that includes a self-portrait. With its explicit references to the processes of alchemical transformation the work draws attention to the enigma of artistic creation and the mutability and versatility of Goltzius’s art. The witty play with various attributes alludes to the multiple roles and guises an artist could assume, and the abundance of detail reflects on the mercurial power of painting as an art that links and connects the worlds of knowledge and deceit. The article argues for a dynamic and discursive notion of subject that challenges rather than satisfies the viewer’s imagination and explores rather than asserts knowledges and ideas.


DEBATE

Black Lives Matter and the Removal of Racist Statues. Perspectives of an African Caesar Alimsinya Atuire

Abstract:
The killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers and the subsequent Black Lives Matter protests have been accompanied by calls for the removal of statues of racists from public space. This has generated debate about the role of statues in the public sphere. I argue that statues are erected to represent a chosen narrative about history. The debate about the removal of statues is a controversy about history and how we relate to it. From this perspective, the Black Lives Matter movement is not a drive to remove or topple statues, but a call for an honest examination of systemic racism and the residual effects of slavery. This call can be a kairos to engage in a constructive dialogue about the societies we aspire to live in. The result of this dialogue, which includes a re-examination of dominant narratives, will decide which statues and monuments can occupy public space and represent our societies.


REVIEWS

Benjamin Anderson, Cosmos and Community in Early Medieval Art
Dieter Blume

Thomas Balfe, Joanna Woodall, Claus Zittel (eds.), Ad vivum? Visual Materials and the Vocabulary of Life-Likeness in Europe before 1800
Sietske Fransen

Diane Waggoner, Lewis Carroll's Photography and Modern Childhood
Bernd Stiegler

Reference:
TOC: 21:Inquiries - Issue II. In: ArtHist.net, Nov 26, 2020 (accessed Mar 29, 2024), <https://arthist.net/archive/24014>.

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