RVA Week 3 AH4 Labuguen
RVA Week 3 AH4 Labuguen
RVA Week 3 AH4 Labuguen
ARTS
WEEK 3
MR. DERICK P. LABUGUEN
Subjects and Uses of
UNIT 3:
What is
ICONOGRAPHY?
ICONOGRAPHY
Is the containment of deeper meanings in simple
representations.
Iconography is a method for examining, categorizing, and interpreting imagery. It has been most
thoroughly employed in the investigation of works from both the Italian and Northern Renaissance
(Warburg [1912] 1999; Panofsky [1953] 1971, Panofsky [1955] 1982), but variations of it have been
used in archaeological contexts (Roller 1999) and, arguably, in Hariman and Lucaites’ study of 20th-century
iconic photography. The most well-known formulation of the method comes from the art historian Erwin
Panofsky. He divided it into three parts:
1. pre-iconographic description. The most fundamental step, identifying the components in a picture.
It is “the sphere of practical experience”, augmented by research when elements of the picture are
unfamiliar (Panofsky [1955] 1982, p. 33).
2. Iconographical analysis. Here, one uses the stuff of pre-iconographic description to identify symbolic
elements such as personifications, allegories, symbols, attributes, and emblems inherent in the artifact. It is
necessary to consult materials outside of the picture or sculpture (including books, myths, and standard
representational practices for the subject) to make sense of these elements.
3. Iconological interpretation. This is “iconology turned interpretative” (Panofsky [1955] 1982, p. 31),
wherein one synthesizes the materials collected from the iconographical analysis with knowledge of the
period in which the picture was created. To check the sanity of one’s
interpretation, Panofsky enjoined the iconographer to hew to the “general and essential tendencies of the
human mind” (Panofsky [1955] 1982, p. 39). (Drainville, 2018)
The most famous paintings of all of Western
art to develop a deeper understanding of how
iconography works: Jan van Eyck’s, Arnolfini
Portrait painted in 1434.
Religion has utilized the arts for its purposes, usually for
rituals and for teaching. Most of the world’s religions used arts
for worship, for preaching, to inspire feelings of devotion, and
to convert non-believers.
The Christian Church commissioned artists and artisans to
tell Christ’s stories, the angels and the saints in pictures like
murals, paintings, mosaics, and stained-glass windows. Biblical
figures were sculpted, and more architectural structures were
seen in churches, basilicas, convents, mosques, and
monasteries.
Talking about personification means talking about allegory because texts and images which are
considered allegories often contain personifications.
Personification art is attaching human attributes to a non-human object. It occurs when a
thing or abstraction is represented as a person.
Cat with a pearl earring is a painting by Delphimages Photo Mother Nature is a painting by Silpa Saseendran which was
Creations which was uploaded on January 19th, 2018. uploaded on October 31st, 2015.
Allegory in art is when the subject of the artwork or the elements that form the
composition, is used to symbolize a spiritual or moral meaning such as love, life, death,
etc.
Allegorical or symbolic scenes were depicted by the Greco-Roman Gods in the West
who stood for ideals like love, desire, or violence.
Allegory of Painting is a painting by
Francois Boucher which was uploaded on
June 17th, 2013.
5. Genre
Artists have always shown a deep concern
and interest about life around them. Their
observations of people going about their usual
ways and performing their daily tasks were mostly
shown in their paintings. Examples of these are
candle vendors, cockfighters, children at play, etc.
These are called genre paintings.
Artists have always been fascinated with their natural and physical environment, consisting of
seascapes, landscapes and cityscapes. Seascape is applied to works that show marine life, water forms and
sailing ships and boats. On the other hand, landscape depicts sceneries on land like mountain, forest, trees,
garden, etc. while cityscape shows urban life.
8. Still Life
Still life refers to any inanimate objects usually arranged in an indoor setting. It is a work whose
forms are arranged deliberately like a basket of fruits, a bunch of flowers, dishes of food on a table,
musical instruments, etc. The goodness of having a still life as a subject is its availability and capability to be
organized. The artists usually arrange the objects to show particular human interests and activities.
9. Protest Art
It is an art whose subject conveys strong hesitance to something, maybe satirical in nature.
This art as a form of disagreement was used by the artists of the early medieval period in expressing
their discontentment and disapproval against the tyranny of Rome. Early Christian art was done secretly
because the Roman empire was bent at consolidating rules under an emperor.
In the modern days, people fighting for their rights made effigies, placards and streamers to raise their
voice in protest.