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WULOLIFE

Meaning in the Visual Arts Author: Irving Panofsky Publisher: The Commercial Press Translator: Shao Hong

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Description

Introduction · · · · · ·

About the Author · · · · · ·

Erwin Panofsky (1892-1968) was born in Hanover, Germany. In 1921, he entered the University of Hamburg to help establish the Department of Art History. In 1934, he moved to the United States because of the Nazis’ rise to power. He first taught at New York University and then entered the newly established Institute of History at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton until his retirement. He spent his entire life exploring the relationship between images and ideas. His ideas not only laid the foundation for modern iconography theory, but also had a profound impact on the entire humanities. He trained a large number of outstanding art historians, making the discipline of art history respected by the world. British scholar Kenneth Clark described him as "the greatest art historian of that era." His representative works include "Iconological Studies", "Ideas", "Dürer's Life and Art", "Gothic Architecture and Scholastic Philosophy", "Early Netherlandish Painting", "Meaning in the Visual Arts", "Renaissance and Renaissance in Western Art", etc.

Shao Hong, born in 1958, is currently a freelance translator and author. His major translations include Thought and Art in the Renaissance, On Art and Appreciation, Problems of Style: The Basis of Decorative History, History of Art Criticism, etc. His major works include Concepts of Art History, The Derived Meaning of "Qiyun": A Study of the Conceptual History of Chinese Painting Theory, The Art History Context of Design, and Mutual Interpretation of Eastern and Western Art.

Table of contents · · · · · ·

PrefaceIntroductionArt History as a Humanistic DisciplineIconography and Iconography: An Introduction to the Study of Renaissance ArtChapter IIHistory of Style Reflected in the Theory of Human ProportionsChapter IIIAbbot Suger of Saint-DenisChapter IVTitian's Allegory on Prudence: A ContinuationChapter VPages from Giorgio Vasari's Sketches: A Study of the Attitude of the Italian Renaissance to the Gothic StyleAppendixTwo Elevation Designs by Domenico Beccafumi and the Problem of Mannerism in ArchitectureChapter VIAlbrecht Dürer and the Classical HeritageAppendixIllustrations to Appianus's Epigraphs of the Antiquities in Relation to DürerChapter VIIThere Was Me Even in Arcadia: Poussin and the Elegy TraditionPostscriptArt History in America for Thirty Years: A European Immigrant's PerspectiveFirst Publications of Collected ArticlesIndexTextIllustrationsTable of ContentsTable of Contents
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