ABSTRACT

Since the nineteenth century, when art history became an established academic discipline, works of art have been 'read' in a variety of ways. These different ways of describing and interpreting art are the methodologies of artistic analysis, the divining rods of meaning. Regardless of a work's perceived difficulty, an art object is, in theory, complex. Every work of art is an expression of its culture (time and place) and its maker (the artist) and is dependent on its media (what it's made of). The methodologies discussed here (formal analysis, iconology and iconography, Marxism, feminism, biography and autobiography, psychoanalysis, structuralism, race and gender) reflect the multiplicity of meanings in an artistic image. The second edition includes nineteen new images, new sections on race, gender, orientalism, and colonialism, and a new epilogue that analyzes a single painting to illustrate the different methodological viewpoints.

chapter 1|18 pages

What Is Art?

chapter 2|22 pages

Formalism and Style

chapter 3|22 pages

Iconography

chapter 6|34 pages

Biography and Autobiography

chapter 8|20 pages

Semiotics II: Deconstruction

chapter 9|22 pages

Psychoanalysis I: Freud

chapter 10|14 pages

Psychoanalysis II: Winnicott and Lacan