Barber, Charles E.

Contesting the Logic of Painting : Art and Understanding in Eleventh-Century Byzantium

BRILL
€ 109,04

Leverbaar

Studies of the icon in Byzantium have tended to focus on the iconoclastic era of the eighth- and ninth-centuries. This study shows that discussion of the icon was far from settled by this lengthy dispute. While the theory of the icon in Byzantium was governed by a logical understanding that had limited painting to the visible alone, the four authors addressed in this book struggled with this constraint. Symeon the New Theologian, driven by a desire for divine vision, chose, effectively, to disregard the icon. Michael Psellos used a profound neoplatonism to examine the relationship between an icon and miracles. Eustratios of Nicaea followed the logic of painting to the point at which he could clarify a distinction between painting from theology. Leo of Chalcedon attempted to describe a formal presence in the divine portrait of Christ. All told, these authors open perspectives on the icon that enrich and expand our own modernist understanding of this crucial medium.

Gebonden | 216 pagina's | Engels
Verschenen in 2007
Rubrieken:

  • DDC: Special topics in fine & decorative arts
  • LCC: Fine Arts » Visual arts » Special subjects of art » Religious art (N8189.B9)
  • ISBN-13: 9789004162716 | ISBN-10: 9004162712