Artigo Revisado por pares

On Monstrously Ambiguous Paintings

1993; Wiley; Volume: 32; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2307/2505524

ISSN

1468-2303

Autores

James Elkins,

Tópico(s)

Architecture and Art History Studies

Resumo

Certain artworks appear to have multiple meanings that are also contradictory. In some instances they have attracted so much attention that they are effectively out of the reach of individual monographs. These artworks are monstrous. One reason paintings may become monstrous is that they make unexpected use of ambiguation. Modern and postmodern works of all sorts are understood to be potentially ambiguous ab ovo, but earlier -Renaissance and Baroque -works were constrained to declare relatively stable primary meanings. An older work may have many layers of meaning, but it is normally expected to declare its principal message or subject matter, together with its allegiance to one idea or theme. Contemporary historical interpretation expects those stable starting meanings, even as it relishes the exfoliating ambiguities that may come afterward. So when the interpretive apparatus of art history runs up against premodern paintings that intentionally work against unambiguous primary meanings, it can generate a potentially incoherent literature. Some of the most monstrous pictures are Leonardo's Last Supper, Michelangelo's Sistine Ceiling, Watteau's fete galante paintings, Botticelli's Primavera, and Giorgione's Tempesta. The interpretive trichotomy of Subject, Not-Subject, and Anti-Subject is employed to talk about the (intentional) ambiguity and polysemy of these monstrous works. This interpretive trichotomy helps order unruly accounts of the most complex artworks. In so doing it illuminates not only some monstrous pictures but a general area

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