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{{about|iconography in art history|religious painting in Eastern Christianity|Icon}} | |||
{{wiktionary}} | |||
{{distinguish|Iconograph|Iconology}} | |||
'''''Iconography''''' is the branch of ] which studies the identification, description and the interpretation of the content of images. The word ''iconography'' literally means "image writing", or painting, and comes from the ] ''εικον'' (image) and ''γραφειν'' (to write). A secondary meaning is the painting of ]s in the ] and ] Christian tradition. A third meaning lies in the field of ], see below. | |||
{{short description|Branch of art history}} | |||
]'s '']'' (1533) is a complex work whose iconography remains the subject of debate.]] | |||
'''Iconography''', as a branch of ], studies the identification, description and interpretation of the content of images: the subjects depicted, the particular compositions and details used to do so, and other elements that are distinct from ]. The word ''iconography'' comes from the ] {{lang|grc|εἰκών}} ("image") and {{lang|grc|γράφειν}} ("to write" or ''to draw''). | |||
==Iconography in religious art== | |||
Icons are used by many different religions, including both ] and ] faiths. | |||
A secondary meaning (based on a non-standard translation of the Greek and Russian equivalent terms) is the production or study of the religious images, called "]", in the ] and ] tradition. This usage is mostly found in works translated from languages such as Greek or Russian, with the correct term being "icon painting". | |||
===Icons in Judaism=== | |||
It is commonly thought that the ] absolutely prohibit "]"; this, however, is not entirely true. There are numerous instances within ] that describe the creation and use of images for religious purposes (the angels on the ], the bronze snake ] mounted on a pole, etc). What is important to note is that none of these are worshipped as ]. Since God is incorporeal and has no form, He cannot be depicted. During the Late Antique period of ] it is clear that restrictions on representation were relaxed considerably; for example, the synagogue at ] had large figurative wall paintings. It is also clear there was a tradition of painted ]s, of which the ] and the ] are medieval Christian copies, none of the originals having survived. There are also many medieval ]s, especially of the ] (]). There does not seem to have been a Jewish tradition of icons as panel paintings, however. | |||
In ], "an iconography" may also mean a particular depiction of a subject in terms of the content of the image, such as the number of figures used, their placing and gestures. The term is also used in many academic fields other than art history, for example ], ], and archaeology,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Eiland |first=Murray |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.30861/9781407360713 |title=Picturing Roman Belief Systems: The iconography of coins in the Republic and Empire |date=2023-04-30 |publisher=British Archaeological Reports (Oxford) Ltd |doi=10.30861/9781407360713 |isbn=978-1-4073-6071-3}}</ref> and in general usage, for the content of images, the typical depiction in images of a subject, and related senses. | |||
===Icons in Christianity=== | |||
] was born of the idea that the immaterial God took flesh in the form of ], making it possible to depict in human form the Son of God. It is for this reason that the ] overturned the old proscriptions against images. Also, the concept of ] was redefined by the Early Church fathers in order to better understand that when someone shows veneration toward an image, the intention is rather to honor the person depicted, not the substance of the icon. | |||
Sometimes distinctions have been made between '']'' and ''iconography'',<ref></ref><ref></ref> although the definitions, and so the distinction made, varies. | |||
Icons flourished within the Christian world, but by the ], ] arose within the Church to challenge the use of icons, and in 726-30 they won Imperial support. The ] actively destroyed icons in most public places, replacing them with the only religious depiction allowed, ]. The ], on the other hand, argued that icons had always been used by Christians and should continue to be allowed. Finally, after much debate at the ] ], held in ] in ], the Iconodules, supported by the Empress, upheld the use of icons as an integral part of Christian tradition. | |||
When referring to movies, genres are immediately recognizable through their iconography, motifs that become associated with a specific genre through repetition.<ref>{{cite book|last= Giannetti|first= Louis|title= Understanding Movies|year= 2008|publisher= Person Prentice Hall|location= Toronto|page= 52}} | |||
</ref> | |||
==Scholarship== | |||
====Eastern Christianity==== | |||
{{main|Icon}} | |||
] | |||
In the traditions of ], only flat images or '']'' images are used. They believe the first icons of Christ and the ] to have been painted by ]. Because the Greeks rejected statuary, the Byzantine icon style was developed in which figures were stylized in a manner that emphasized their holiness rather than their humanity. Symbolism allowed the icon to present highly complex material in a very simple way, making it possible to educate even the illiterate in theology. The interiors of Orthodox Churches are often completely covered in icons of Christ, Mary and the saints. Most are portrait figures in various conventional poses, but many narrative scenes are also depicted. Today, icons are still used extensively by the Eastern Orthodox and the Eastern Catholics. Icons are kissed, carried in procession, and venerated. | |||
=== Foundations === | |||
Early Western writers who took special note of the content of images include ], whose ''Ragionamenti'' interpreted the paintings in the ] in ]. ''Ragionamenti'' reassuringly demonstrates that such works were difficult to understand even for well-informed contemporaries. Lesser known, though it had informed poets, painters and sculptors for over two centuries after its 1593 publication, was ]'s ] ''Iconologia''.<ref>Ripa's full title, rarely used, was ''Iconologia overo Descrittione Dell’imagini Universali cavate dall’Antichità et da altri luoghi''; </ref> ], a 17th-century biographer of artists of his own time, describes and analyses, not always correctly, many works. ]'s study (1796) of the classical figure ] with an inverted torch was an early attempt to use a study of a type of image to explain the culture it originated in, rather than the other way round.<ref name="Białostocki:535">Białostocki:535</ref> | |||
Until the 13th century, icons followed a broadly similar pattern in West and East, although very few such early examples survive from either tradition. Western icons, which are not usually so termed, were largely patterned on Byzantine works, and equally conventional in composition and depiction. From this point on the Western tradition came slowly to allow the artist far more flexibility, and a more realistic approach to the figures. | |||
]'s so-called ] – in fact this is a later title for a '']'' cycle on a single panel. Altogether 25 scenes, not all involving the Virgin, are depicted. 1480, ], Munich.<ref>Alte Pinakotek, Munich; (Summary Catalogue – various authors), pp. 348-51, 1986, Edition Lipp, {{ISBN|3-87490-701-5}}</ref>]] | |||
Iconography as an academic art historical discipline developed in the nineteenth century in the works of scholars such as ] (1806–1867), ] (1825–1891), and ] (1862–1954)<ref name="kleinbauer">W. Eugene Kleinbauer and Thomas P. Slavens, ''Research Guide to the History of Western Art'', Sources of information in the humanities, no. 2. Chicago: ] (1982): 60-72.</ref> all specialists in Christian religious art, which was the main focus of study in this period, in which French scholars were especially prominent.<ref name="Białostocki:535"/> They looked back to earlier attempts to classify and organise subjects encyclopedically like Cesare Ripa and ]'s ''Recueil d'antiquités égyptiennes, étrusques, grècques, romaines et gauloises'' as guides to understanding works of art, both religious and profane, in a more scientific manner than the popular ] approach of the time.<ref name="kleinbauer" /> These early contributions paved the way for ]s, manuals, and other publications useful in identifying the content of art. Mâle's ''l'Art religieux du XIIIe siècle en France'' (originally 1899, with revised editions) translated into English as ''The Gothic Image, Religious Art in France of the Thirteenth Century'' has remained continuously in print. | |||
=== Twentieth century === | |||
In the 15th century the use of icons in the West was enormously increased by the introduction of ] on ], mostly ]s which were produced in vast numbers. With the ], after an initial uncertainty among early ], ] came down firmly against icon-like portraits, especially larger ones, even of Christ. Many Protestants found these idolatrous. Catholics maintained and even intensified the traditional use of icons, both printed and on paper, using the different styles of the ] and ]. Popular Catholic imagery to a certain extent has remained attached to a ] of about 1650, especially in ] and ]. | |||
In early twentieth-century ], ] (1866–1929) and his followers ] (1890–1948) and ] (1892–1968) elaborated the practice of identification and classification of motifs in images to using iconography as a means to understanding meaning.<ref name="kleinbauer" /> Panofsky codified an influential approach to iconography in his 1939 ''Studies in Iconology'', where he defined it as "the branch of the history of art which concerns itself with the subject matter or meaning of works of art, as opposed to form,"<ref name="kleinbauer" /> although the distinction he and other scholars drew between particular definitions of "iconography" (put simply, the identification of visual content) and "iconology" (the analysis of the meaning of that content), has not been generally accepted, though it is still used by some writers.<ref>For example by ] in her ''Methods and Theories of Art History'', pp. 20-28, 2005, Laurence King Publishing, {{ISBN|1-85669-417-8}}</ref> | |||
In the ], to which Panofsky immigrated in 1931, students such as ], and ] continued under his influence in the discipline.<ref name="kleinbauer" /> In an influential article of 1942, ''Introduction to an "Iconography of Mediaeval Architecture"'',<ref>Richard Krautheimer, Introduction to an "Iconography of Mediaeval Architecture", Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, Vol. 5. (1942), pp. 1-33. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080408194332/http://aar.iec.cat/institucio/societats/AmicsArtRomanic/activitats/textosesp/espanol04.pdf |date=April 8, 2008 }}</ref> ], a specialist on early medieval churches and another German émigré, extended iconographical analysis to ]. | |||
=== Islamic view of icons === | |||
''See also: ]'' | |||
The period from 1940 can be seen as one where iconography was especially prominent in art history.<ref>Białostocki:537</ref> Whereas most iconographical scholarship remains highly dense and specialized, some analyses began to attract a much wider audience, for example ]'s theory (now generally out of favour with specialists of that picture) that the writing on the rear wall in the '']'' by ] turned the painting into the record of a marriage contract. ]'s '']'' has been the subject of books for a general market with new theories as to its iconography,<ref>Most recently: North, John (September, 2004). The Ambassador's Secret: Holbein and the World of the Renaissance. Orion Books</ref> and the ]s of ] include theories, disowned by most art historians, on the iconography of works by ]. | |||
] view sanctified icons as idols, and strictly forbid their worship, nor do they pray in front of one. However, the various ] take different positions on the role of visual depictions of living (or once-living) creatures, including people. At one end of the spectrum, sects such as the ]s totally ban drawings and photography. Some branches of Islam forbid only the former but allow the latter. The majority of ] Muslims permit both. Some ] allow even ] ] and the ], a position totally unacceptable to most Sunnis. | |||
The method of ], which had developed following the publications of Erwin Panofsky, has been critically discussed since the mid-1950s, in part also strongly (], ]). However, among the critics, no one has found a model of interpretation that could completely replace that of Panofsky. <ref>Dieter Wuttke (2017), "Erwin Panofsky (1892-1968)", in: The Routledge Companion to Medieval Iconography, ed. by Colum Hourihane, London and New York, pp. 105-122, here p. 119).</ref> | |||
=== Icons in Hinduism === | |||
] god ]. Note the blue skin and '']'' drum held in his back hand]] | |||
{{main|Hindu iconography}} | |||
Images of ] and goddesses use a rich ]. Some figures are blue-skinned (the color of ]) or have multiple arms holding various symbols which depict aspects of the god. | |||
As regards the interpretation of ], that Panofsky researched throughout his life, the iconographic interest in texts as possible sources remains important, because the meaning of ] and ] is closely linked to the content of ], ] and ] texts, which were usually considered authoritative by most patrons, artists and viewers.<ref>] and Maciej Jan Jasiński (2024), , in ''Church, Communication and Culture'' 9, pp. 1-36, here pp. 1-4, 9, 23, 28.</ref> | |||
== Iconography in other academic research == | |||
In other academic disciplines such as ], ], ] and ], iconography refers the study of images or ], such as those images that have an important significance to a particular culture or time. Discussing imagery as iconography in this way implies a critical "reading" of imagery that often attempts to explore social and cultural values. Iconography is also used within ] to describe the visual language of cinema, particularly within the field of ].<ref name="film">Cook and Bernink (1999, 138-140).</ref> | |||
Technological advances allowed the building-up of huge collections of photographs, with an iconographic arrangement or index, which include those of the ] and the Index of Medieval Art<ref> website</ref> (formerly Index of Christian Art) at ] (which has made a specialism of iconography since its early days in America).<ref>Białostocki:538-39</ref> These are now being digitised and made available online, usually on a restricted basis. | |||
==Iconography in Dharmic Religions== | |||
*] | |||
With the arrival of computing, the ] system, a highly complex system for the classification of the content of images, with 40,000+ classification types, and 84,000 (14,000 unique) keywords, was developed in the Netherlands as a standard classification for recording collections, with the idea of assembling huge databases that will allow the retrieval of images featuring particular details, subjects or other common factors. For example, the Iconclass code "71H7131" is for the subject of "] (alone) with David's letter", whereas "71" is the whole "]" and "71H" the "story of ]". A number of collections of different types have been classified using Iconclass, notably many types of ], the collections of the ] and the German ]. These are available, usually on-line or on ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.iconclass.nl/ |title=Iconclass website |publisher=Iconclass.nl |access-date=2014-03-31}}</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080220200839/http://www.kb.nl/manuscripts/browser/index.html |date=2008-02-20 }} and </ref> The system can also be used outside pure art history, for example on sites like ].<ref></ref> | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
==Brief survey of iconography== | |||
Dharmic Religious {{fact}} iconography and ] includes ], ] and divine qualities and attributes represented by ], ] and ritual tools such as the ], ], ], ], ], symbolic use of color to denote the ] or ] and letters and ] syllables from sacred alphabetic scripts. | |||
<!-- Other sections needed on Classical Antiquity Iconography, East Asian Iconography, etc.--> | |||
{{More citations needed section|date=May 2014}} | |||
]an ] of ].]] | |||
] are used to some extent by all major religions, including both ] and ] faiths, and often contain highly complex iconography, which reflects centuries of accumulated tradition. Secular Western iconography later drew upon these themes. | |||
=== Indian religious iconography === | |||
Central to the iconography and ] of ] are ] or gestures with specific meanings. Other features include the ] and ], also found in Christian and Islamic art, and divine qualities and attributes represented by ] and ritual tools such as the ], ], ], ], ] and ]. The symbolic use of colour to denote the ] or ] and letters and ] syllables from sacred alphabetic scripts are other features. Under the influence of ] art developed esoteric meanings, accessible only to initiates; this is an especially strong feature of ]. The art of Indian Religions esp. Hindus in its numerous sectoral divisions is governed by sacred texts called the ] which describes the ratio and proportion of the icon, called ''taalmaana'' as well as mood of the central figure in a context. For example, ] an incarnation of ] though considered a wrathful deity but in few contexts is depicted in pacified mood. | |||
Although iconic depictions of, or concentrating on, a single figure are the dominant type of ] image, large stone ] or ] narrative cycles of the ''Life of the Buddha'', or tales of his previous lives, are found at major sites like ], ], and ], especially in earlier periods. Conversely, in ] art, narrative scenes have become rather more common in recent centuries, especially in ] of the lives of ] and ]. | |||
=== Christian iconography === | |||
{{main|Christian symbolism}} {{further|Christian art| Eastern Orthodox iconography|Marian art in the Catholic Church}} | |||
] features Christian iconography, prominently developed in the ] era and ], and is a prominent aspect of ].<ref name="Freeman">{{cite web | last=Freeman | first=Evan | title=The life of Christ in medieval and Renaissance art – Smarthistory | website=Smarthistory – art history | url=https://smarthistory.org/standard-scenes-from-the-life-of-christ-in-art/ | access-date=March 2, 2022}}</ref><ref name="Taylor 2013">{{cite web | last=Taylor | first=Justin | title=All the Known Audio of C.S. Lewis Speaking | website=The Gospel Coalition | date=July 18, 2013 | url=https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/justin-taylor/all-the-known-audio-of-c-s-lewis-speaking/ | access-date=March 2, 2022}}</ref> ] within ] from the outset, and the development of ] occurred within the first seven centuries after ].<ref>], "The Cult of Images in the Age before Iconoclasm", ''Dumbarton Oaks Papers'', Vol. 8, (1954), pp. 83–150, Dumbarton Oaks, Trustees for Harvard University, </ref><ref name="The Westminster theological journal pp. 35–47">{{cite journal | title=The Early Church on the Aniconic Spectrum | journal=The Westminster Theological Journal | volume=83 | issue=1 | issn=0043-4388 | pages=35–47 | url=https://ixtheo.de/Record/1765247462 | access-date=March 2, 2022}}</ref> Small images in the ] show ] figures, portraits of Christ and some saints, and a limited number of "abbreviated representations" of biblical episodes emphasizing deliverance. From the Constantinian period monumental art borrowed motifs from Roman Imperial imagery, classical Greek and Roman religion and popular art – the motif of ] owes something to both Imperial portraits and depictions of ]. In the ] period iconography began to be standardized, and to relate more closely to ] texts, although many gaps in the ] narratives were plugged with matter from the ]. Eventually, the Church would succeed in weeding most of these out, but some remain, like the ox and ass in the ]. | |||
] of {{Circa|1300}}, an example of the ] type of ].]] | |||
After the ] iconographical innovation was regarded as unhealthy, if not heretical, in the Eastern Church, though it still continued at a glacial pace. More than in the West, traditional depictions were often considered to have authentic or ], and the job of the artist was to copy them with as little deviation as possible. The Eastern church also never accepted the use of monumental ] or free-standing sculpture, which it found too reminiscent of paganism. Most modern ] ]s are very close to their predecessors of a thousand years ago, though development, and some shifts in meaning, have occurred – for example, the old man wearing a fleece in conversation with ] usually seen in Orthodox Nativities seems to have begun as one of the shepherds, or the prophet ], but is now usually understood as the "Tempter" (]).<ref>Schiller:66</ref> | |||
In both East and West, numerous iconic types of ], ] and saints and other subjects were developed; the number of named types of icons of Mary, with or without the infant Christ, was especially large in the East, whereas ] was much the commonest image of Christ. Especially important depictions of Mary include the ] and ] types. Traditional models evolved for narrative paintings, including large cycles covering the ], the ], parts of the Old Testament, and, increasingly, the lives of popular ]s. Especially in the West, a system of ] developed for ] figures of saints by a standard appearance and symbolic objects held by them; in the East, they were more likely to identified by text labels. | |||
From the ] period sculpture on churches became increasingly important in Western art, and probably partly because of the lack of Byzantine models, became the location of much iconographic innovation, along with the ], which had already taken a decisively different direction from Byzantine equivalents, under the influence of ] and other factors. Developments in theology and devotional practice produced innovations like the subject of the ] and the ], Both associated with the ]s, as were many other developments. Most painters remained content to copy and slightly modify the works of others, and it is clear that the clergy, by whom or for whose churches most art was commissioned, often specified what they wanted shown in great detail. | |||
The theory of ], by which the meaning of most events of the ] was understood as a "type" or pre-figuring of an event in the life of, or aspect of, Christ or Mary was often reflected in art, and in the later ] came to dominate the choice of Old Testament scenes in Western Christian art. | |||
]'s ] of 1425-28 has a highly complex iconography that is still debated. Is ] making a mousetrap, reflecting a remark of Saint ] that Christ's Incarnation was a trap to catch men's souls?]] | |||
Whereas in the Romanesque and ] periods the great majority of religious art was intended to convey often complex religious messages as clearly as possible, with the arrival of ] iconography became highly sophisticated, and in many cases appears to be deliberately enigmatic, even for a well-educated contemporary. The subtle layers of meaning uncovered by modern iconographical research in works of ] such as the ], and of Jan van Eyck such as the ] and the ] lie in small details of what are on first viewing very conventional representations. When Italian painting developed a taste for enigma, considerably later, it most often showed in secular compositions influenced by ]. | |||
From the 15th century religious painting gradually freed itself from the habit of following earlier compositional models, and by the 16th century ambitious artists were expected to find novel compositions for each subject, and direct borrowings from earlier artists are more often of the poses of individual figures than of whole compositions. The ] soon restricted most ] religious painting to Biblical scenes conceived along the lines of ], and after some decades the Catholic ] reined in somewhat the freedom of Catholic artists. | |||
]s painting icons on the wall of an Abbey in France.]] | |||
=== Secular Western iconography === | |||
Secular painting became far more common in the West from the Renaissance, and developed its own traditions and conventions of iconography, in ], which includes ], ], ], and even ], not to mention modern media and genres like ], ], ]s, ]s. | |||
Renaissance mythological painting was in theory reviving the iconography of its ], but in practice themes like ] developed on largely original lines, and for different purposes. Personal iconographies, where works appear to have significant meanings individual to, and perhaps only accessible by, the artist, go back at least as far as ], but have become increasingly significant with artists like ], ], ], ], ], and ]. | |||
== In disciplines other than art history{{anchor|iconography and popular culture}} == | |||
Iconography, often of aspects of ], is a concern of other ] including ], ], ], ], ], and ]. These analyses in turn have affected conventional art history, especially concepts such as ]. Discussing imagery as iconography in this way implies a critical "reading" of imagery that often attempts to explore social and cultural values. Iconography is also used within ] to describe the ] of cinema, particularly within the field of ].<ref name="film">Cook and Bernink (1999, 138-140).</ref> In the age of Internet, the new global history of the visual production of Humanity (Histiconologia<ref>The first World Dictionary of Images: Laurent Gervereau (ed.), "Dictionnaire mondial des images", Paris, Nouveau monde, 2006, 1120p, {{ISBN|978-2-84736-185-8}}. (with 275 specialists from all continents, all specialities, all periods from Prehistory to nowadays); Laurent Gervereau, "Images, une histoire mondiale", Paris, Nouveau monde, 2008, 272p., {{ISBN|978-2-84736-362-3}}</ref>) includes History of Art and history of all kind of images or medias. | |||
Contemporary iconography research often draws on theories of visual framing to address such diverse issues as the iconography of climate change created by different stakeholders,<ref>{{Cite book|last=Wozniak|first=Antal|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1226584969|title=Research Handbook on Communicating Climate Change|publisher=]|year=2020|isbn=978-1-78990-040-8|editor-last=Holmes|editor-first=David C.|location=Cheltenham, Gloucestershire|pages=131–143|chapter=Stakeholders Visual Representations of Climate Change|oclc=1226584969|editor-last2=Richardson|editor-first2=Lucy M.}}</ref> the iconography that international organizations create about natural disasters,<ref>{{Cite book|last=Revet|first=Sandrine|title=Disasterland |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1153066230|publisher=]|year=2020|isbn=978-3-030-41581-5|location=Cham|pages=53–80|chapter=Disaster Iconography: Victims, Rescue Workers, and Hazards|doi=10.1007/978-3-030-41582-2_3|s2cid=219010604|oclc=1153066230}}</ref> the iconography of epidemics disseminated in the press,<ref>{{Cite book|last=King|first=Nicholas B.|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/904372902|title=Empires of Panic: Epidemics and Colonial Anxieties|publisher=]|year=2015|isbn=978-988-8208-44-9|editor-last=Peckham|editor-first=Robert|location=Hong Kong|pages=181–203|chapter=Mediating Panic: The Iconography of New Infectious Threats, 1936-2009|oclc=904372902}}</ref> and the iconography of suffering found in social media.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Johansson|first1=Anna|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/902846595|title=World Suffering and Quality of Life|last2=Sternudd|first2=Hans T.|publisher=]|year=2015|isbn=978-94-017-9670-5|editor-last=Anderson|editor-first=R.|series=Social Indicators Research Series|volume=56|location=Dordrecht|pages=341–355|chapter=Iconography of Suffering in Social Media: Images of Sitting Girls|doi=10.1007/978-94-017-9670-5_26|oclc=902846595}}</ref> | |||
An iconography study in ] analyzed stock photos used in press reporting to depict the social issue of child sexual abuse.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Döring|first1=Nicola|last2=Walter|first2=Roberto|date=2021|title=Ikonografien des sexuellen Kindesmissbrauchs: Symbolbilder in Presseartikeln und Präventionsmaterialien|journal=Studies in Communication and Media|volume=10|issue=3|pages=362–405|doi=10.5771/2192-4007-2021-3-362|s2cid=242216019|issn=2192-4007|doi-access=free}}</ref> Based on a sample of N=1,437 child sexual abuse (CSA) online press articles that included 419 stock photos, a CSA iconography (i.e. a set of typical image motifs for a topic) was revealed that relate to criminal reporting: The CSA iconography visualizes 1. crime contexts, 2. course of the crime and people involved, and 3. consequences of the crime for the people involved (e.g., image motif: perpetrator in handcuffs). | |||
==Articles with iconographical analysis of individual works== | |||
*] frescoes | |||
*] by ] | |||
*The ] | |||
*The ] by ] | |||
*'']'', '']'', ], all by ] | |||
*'']'' by ] | |||
*'']'' by Rogier van der Weyden | |||
*'']'' by ] | |||
*'']'' and '']'' by ] | |||
*'']'' by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] | |||
==Examples== | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*Specific religions: | |||
**] | |||
**] | |||
***] | |||
***] | |||
***] | |||
***] | |||
***] | |||
== |
== References == | ||
=== Citations === | |||
* Cook, Pam and Mieke Bernink, eds. 1999. ''The Cinema Book''. 2nd ed. London: BFI Publishing. ISBN 0851707262. | |||
{{Reflist|32em}} | |||
== |
=== Sources === | ||
* Alunno, Marco. in ESM Mediamusic. No. 2 (2013) | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
* Białostocki, Jan, , ''Dictionary of The History of Ideas'', Online version, University of Virginia Library, Gale Group, 2003 | |||
* ] and Maciej Jan Jasiński, '''', in ''Church, Communication and Culture'' 9 (2024), pp. 1–36. DOI: 10.1080/23753234.2024.2322546 | |||
* Cook, Pam and Mieke Bernink, eds. 1999. ''The Cinema Book''. 2nd ed. London: BFI Publishing. {{ISBN|0-85170-726-2}}. | |||
* ]. ''Iconography of Christian Art, Vol. I'',1971 (English trans from German), Lund Humphries, London, {{ISBN|0-85331-270-2}} | |||
* '']'' (''LIMC''), Artemis Verlag, 1981-2009 | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
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*—iconography of ancient mythology. | |||
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Latest revision as of 08:35, 30 November 2024
This article is about iconography in art history. For religious painting in Eastern Christianity, see Icon. Not to be confused with Iconograph or Iconology. Branch of art historyIconography, as a branch of art history, studies the identification, description and interpretation of the content of images: the subjects depicted, the particular compositions and details used to do so, and other elements that are distinct from artistic style. The word iconography comes from the Greek εἰκών ("image") and γράφειν ("to write" or to draw).
A secondary meaning (based on a non-standard translation of the Greek and Russian equivalent terms) is the production or study of the religious images, called "icons", in the Byzantine and Orthodox Christian tradition. This usage is mostly found in works translated from languages such as Greek or Russian, with the correct term being "icon painting".
In art history, "an iconography" may also mean a particular depiction of a subject in terms of the content of the image, such as the number of figures used, their placing and gestures. The term is also used in many academic fields other than art history, for example semiotics, media studies, and archaeology, and in general usage, for the content of images, the typical depiction in images of a subject, and related senses.
Sometimes distinctions have been made between iconology and iconography, although the definitions, and so the distinction made, varies. When referring to movies, genres are immediately recognizable through their iconography, motifs that become associated with a specific genre through repetition.
Scholarship
Foundations
Early Western writers who took special note of the content of images include Giorgio Vasari, whose Ragionamenti interpreted the paintings in the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence. Ragionamenti reassuringly demonstrates that such works were difficult to understand even for well-informed contemporaries. Lesser known, though it had informed poets, painters and sculptors for over two centuries after its 1593 publication, was Cesare Ripa's emblem book Iconologia. Gian Pietro Bellori, a 17th-century biographer of artists of his own time, describes and analyses, not always correctly, many works. Lessing's study (1796) of the classical figure Amor with an inverted torch was an early attempt to use a study of a type of image to explain the culture it originated in, rather than the other way round.
Iconography as an academic art historical discipline developed in the nineteenth century in the works of scholars such as Adolphe Napoleon Didron (1806–1867), Anton Heinrich Springer (1825–1891), and Émile Mâle (1862–1954) all specialists in Christian religious art, which was the main focus of study in this period, in which French scholars were especially prominent. They looked back to earlier attempts to classify and organise subjects encyclopedically like Cesare Ripa and Anne Claude Philippe de Caylus's Recueil d'antiquités égyptiennes, étrusques, grècques, romaines et gauloises as guides to understanding works of art, both religious and profane, in a more scientific manner than the popular aesthetic approach of the time. These early contributions paved the way for encyclopedias, manuals, and other publications useful in identifying the content of art. Mâle's l'Art religieux du XIIIe siècle en France (originally 1899, with revised editions) translated into English as The Gothic Image, Religious Art in France of the Thirteenth Century has remained continuously in print.
Twentieth century
In early twentieth-century Germany, Aby Warburg (1866–1929) and his followers Fritz Saxl (1890–1948) and Erwin Panofsky (1892–1968) elaborated the practice of identification and classification of motifs in images to using iconography as a means to understanding meaning. Panofsky codified an influential approach to iconography in his 1939 Studies in Iconology, where he defined it as "the branch of the history of art which concerns itself with the subject matter or meaning of works of art, as opposed to form," although the distinction he and other scholars drew between particular definitions of "iconography" (put simply, the identification of visual content) and "iconology" (the analysis of the meaning of that content), has not been generally accepted, though it is still used by some writers.
In the United States, to which Panofsky immigrated in 1931, students such as Frederick Hartt, and Meyer Schapiro continued under his influence in the discipline. In an influential article of 1942, Introduction to an "Iconography of Mediaeval Architecture", Richard Krautheimer, a specialist on early medieval churches and another German émigré, extended iconographical analysis to architectural forms.
The period from 1940 can be seen as one where iconography was especially prominent in art history. Whereas most iconographical scholarship remains highly dense and specialized, some analyses began to attract a much wider audience, for example Panofsky's theory (now generally out of favour with specialists of that picture) that the writing on the rear wall in the Arnolfini Portrait by Jan van Eyck turned the painting into the record of a marriage contract. Holbein's The Ambassadors has been the subject of books for a general market with new theories as to its iconography, and the best-sellers of Dan Brown include theories, disowned by most art historians, on the iconography of works by Leonardo da Vinci.
The method of iconology, which had developed following the publications of Erwin Panofsky, has been critically discussed since the mid-1950s, in part also strongly (Otto Pächt, Svetlana Alpers). However, among the critics, no one has found a model of interpretation that could completely replace that of Panofsky.
As regards the interpretation of Christian art, that Panofsky researched throughout his life, the iconographic interest in texts as possible sources remains important, because the meaning of Christian images and architecture is closely linked to the content of biblical, liturgical and theological texts, which were usually considered authoritative by most patrons, artists and viewers.
Technological advances allowed the building-up of huge collections of photographs, with an iconographic arrangement or index, which include those of the Warburg Institute and the Index of Medieval Art (formerly Index of Christian Art) at Princeton (which has made a specialism of iconography since its early days in America). These are now being digitised and made available online, usually on a restricted basis.
With the arrival of computing, the Iconclass system, a highly complex system for the classification of the content of images, with 40,000+ classification types, and 84,000 (14,000 unique) keywords, was developed in the Netherlands as a standard classification for recording collections, with the idea of assembling huge databases that will allow the retrieval of images featuring particular details, subjects or other common factors. For example, the Iconclass code "71H7131" is for the subject of "Bathsheba (alone) with David's letter", whereas "71" is the whole "Old Testament" and "71H" the "story of David". A number of collections of different types have been classified using Iconclass, notably many types of old master print, the collections of the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin and the German Marburger Index. These are available, usually on-line or on DVD. The system can also be used outside pure art history, for example on sites like Flickr.
Brief survey of iconography
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Religious images are used to some extent by all major religions, including both Indian and Abrahamic faiths, and often contain highly complex iconography, which reflects centuries of accumulated tradition. Secular Western iconography later drew upon these themes.
Indian religious iconography
Central to the iconography and hagiography of Indian religions are mudra or gestures with specific meanings. Other features include the aureola and halo, also found in Christian and Islamic art, and divine qualities and attributes represented by asana and ritual tools such as the dharmachakra, vajra, chhatra, sauwastika, phurba and danda. The symbolic use of colour to denote the Classical Elements or Mahabhuta and letters and bija syllables from sacred alphabetic scripts are other features. Under the influence of tantra art developed esoteric meanings, accessible only to initiates; this is an especially strong feature of Tibetan art. The art of Indian Religions esp. Hindus in its numerous sectoral divisions is governed by sacred texts called the Aagama which describes the ratio and proportion of the icon, called taalmaana as well as mood of the central figure in a context. For example, Narasimha an incarnation of Vishnu though considered a wrathful deity but in few contexts is depicted in pacified mood.
Although iconic depictions of, or concentrating on, a single figure are the dominant type of Buddhist image, large stone relief or fresco narrative cycles of the Life of the Buddha, or tales of his previous lives, are found at major sites like Sarnath, Ajanta, and Borobudor, especially in earlier periods. Conversely, in Hindu art, narrative scenes have become rather more common in recent centuries, especially in miniature paintings of the lives of Krishna and Rama.
Christian iconography
Main article: Christian symbolism Further information: Christian art, Eastern Orthodox iconography, and Marian art in the Catholic ChurchChristian art features Christian iconography, prominently developed in the medieval era and renaissance, and is a prominent aspect of Christian media. Aniconism was rejected within Christian theology from the outset, and the development of early Christian art and architecture occurred within the first seven centuries after Jesus. Small images in the Catacombs of Rome show orans figures, portraits of Christ and some saints, and a limited number of "abbreviated representations" of biblical episodes emphasizing deliverance. From the Constantinian period monumental art borrowed motifs from Roman Imperial imagery, classical Greek and Roman religion and popular art – the motif of Christ in Majesty owes something to both Imperial portraits and depictions of Zeus. In the Late Antique period iconography began to be standardized, and to relate more closely to Biblical texts, although many gaps in the canonical Gospel narratives were plugged with matter from the apocryphal gospels. Eventually, the Church would succeed in weeding most of these out, but some remain, like the ox and ass in the Nativity of Christ.
After the period of Byzantine iconoclasm iconographical innovation was regarded as unhealthy, if not heretical, in the Eastern Church, though it still continued at a glacial pace. More than in the West, traditional depictions were often considered to have authentic or miraculous origins, and the job of the artist was to copy them with as little deviation as possible. The Eastern church also never accepted the use of monumental high relief or free-standing sculpture, which it found too reminiscent of paganism. Most modern Eastern Orthodox icons are very close to their predecessors of a thousand years ago, though development, and some shifts in meaning, have occurred – for example, the old man wearing a fleece in conversation with Saint Joseph usually seen in Orthodox Nativities seems to have begun as one of the shepherds, or the prophet Isaiah, but is now usually understood as the "Tempter" (Satan).
In both East and West, numerous iconic types of Christ, Mary and saints and other subjects were developed; the number of named types of icons of Mary, with or without the infant Christ, was especially large in the East, whereas Christ Pantocrator was much the commonest image of Christ. Especially important depictions of Mary include the Hodegetria and Panagia types. Traditional models evolved for narrative paintings, including large cycles covering the events of the Life of Christ, the Life of the Virgin, parts of the Old Testament, and, increasingly, the lives of popular saints. Especially in the West, a system of attributes developed for identifying individual figures of saints by a standard appearance and symbolic objects held by them; in the East, they were more likely to identified by text labels.
From the Romanesque period sculpture on churches became increasingly important in Western art, and probably partly because of the lack of Byzantine models, became the location of much iconographic innovation, along with the illuminated manuscript, which had already taken a decisively different direction from Byzantine equivalents, under the influence of Insular art and other factors. Developments in theology and devotional practice produced innovations like the subject of the Coronation of the Virgin and the Assumption, Both associated with the Franciscans, as were many other developments. Most painters remained content to copy and slightly modify the works of others, and it is clear that the clergy, by whom or for whose churches most art was commissioned, often specified what they wanted shown in great detail.
The theory of typology, by which the meaning of most events of the Old Testament was understood as a "type" or pre-figuring of an event in the life of, or aspect of, Christ or Mary was often reflected in art, and in the later Middle Ages came to dominate the choice of Old Testament scenes in Western Christian art.
Whereas in the Romanesque and Gothic periods the great majority of religious art was intended to convey often complex religious messages as clearly as possible, with the arrival of Early Netherlandish painting iconography became highly sophisticated, and in many cases appears to be deliberately enigmatic, even for a well-educated contemporary. The subtle layers of meaning uncovered by modern iconographical research in works of Robert Campin such as the Mérode Altarpiece, and of Jan van Eyck such as the Madonna of Chancellor Rolin and the Washington Annunciation lie in small details of what are on first viewing very conventional representations. When Italian painting developed a taste for enigma, considerably later, it most often showed in secular compositions influenced by Renaissance Neo-Platonism.
From the 15th century religious painting gradually freed itself from the habit of following earlier compositional models, and by the 16th century ambitious artists were expected to find novel compositions for each subject, and direct borrowings from earlier artists are more often of the poses of individual figures than of whole compositions. The Reformation soon restricted most Protestant religious painting to Biblical scenes conceived along the lines of history painting, and after some decades the Catholic Council of Trent reined in somewhat the freedom of Catholic artists.
Secular Western iconography
Secular painting became far more common in the West from the Renaissance, and developed its own traditions and conventions of iconography, in history painting, which includes mythologies, portraits, genre scenes, and even landscapes, not to mention modern media and genres like photography, cinema, political cartoons, comic books.
Renaissance mythological painting was in theory reviving the iconography of its Classical Antiquity, but in practice themes like Leda and the Swan developed on largely original lines, and for different purposes. Personal iconographies, where works appear to have significant meanings individual to, and perhaps only accessible by, the artist, go back at least as far as Hieronymous Bosch, but have become increasingly significant with artists like Goya, William Blake, Gauguin, Picasso, Frida Kahlo, and Joseph Beuys.
In disciplines other than art history
Iconography, often of aspects of popular culture, is a concern of other academic disciplines including Semiotics, Anthropology, Sociology, Media Studies, Communication Studies, and Cultural Studies. These analyses in turn have affected conventional art history, especially concepts such as signs in semiotics. Discussing imagery as iconography in this way implies a critical "reading" of imagery that often attempts to explore social and cultural values. Iconography is also used within film studies to describe the visual language of cinema, particularly within the field of genre criticism. In the age of Internet, the new global history of the visual production of Humanity (Histiconologia) includes History of Art and history of all kind of images or medias.
Contemporary iconography research often draws on theories of visual framing to address such diverse issues as the iconography of climate change created by different stakeholders, the iconography that international organizations create about natural disasters, the iconography of epidemics disseminated in the press, and the iconography of suffering found in social media.
An iconography study in communication science analyzed stock photos used in press reporting to depict the social issue of child sexual abuse. Based on a sample of N=1,437 child sexual abuse (CSA) online press articles that included 419 stock photos, a CSA iconography (i.e. a set of typical image motifs for a topic) was revealed that relate to criminal reporting: The CSA iconography visualizes 1. crime contexts, 2. course of the crime and people involved, and 3. consequences of the crime for the people involved (e.g., image motif: perpetrator in handcuffs).
Articles with iconographical analysis of individual works
- Castelseprio frescoes
- The Flagellation by Piero della Francesca
- The Wilton Diptych
- The Mérode Altarpiece by Robert Campin
- Madonna of Chancellor Rolin, Arnolfini Portrait, Annunciation, all by Jan van Eyck
- Virgin and Child Enthroned by Rogier van der Weyden
- The Magdalen Reading by Rogier van der Weyden
- Saint Jerome in His Study by Antonello da Messina
- Two Venetian Ladies and Saint Augustine in His Study by Vittore Carpaccio
- Melencolia I by Albrecht Dürer
- Marie de' Medici cycle by Rubens
- Ivan Rutkovych
Examples
See also
References
Citations
- Eiland, Murray (2023-04-30). Picturing Roman Belief Systems: The iconography of coins in the Republic and Empire. British Archaeological Reports (Oxford) Ltd. doi:10.30861/9781407360713. ISBN 978-1-4073-6071-3.
- Oxford Bibliographies: Paul Taylor, "Iconology and Iconography"
- Erwin Panofsky, Studies in Iconology: Humanistic Themes in the Art of the Renaissance. Oxford 1939.
- Giannetti, Louis (2008). Understanding Movies. Toronto: Person Prentice Hall. p. 52.
- Ripa's full title, rarely used, was Iconologia overo Descrittione Dell’imagini Universali cavate dall’Antichità et da altri luoghi; English Translations and Adaptations of Cesare Ripa's Iconologia: From the 17th to the 19th Century by Hans-Joachim Zimmermann
- ^ Białostocki:535
- Alte Pinakotek, Munich; (Summary Catalogue – various authors), pp. 348-51, 1986, Edition Lipp, ISBN 3-87490-701-5
- ^ W. Eugene Kleinbauer and Thomas P. Slavens, Research Guide to the History of Western Art, Sources of information in the humanities, no. 2. Chicago: American Library Association (1982): 60-72.
- For example by Anne D'Alleva in her Methods and Theories of Art History, pp. 20-28, 2005, Laurence King Publishing, ISBN 1-85669-417-8
- Richard Krautheimer, Introduction to an "Iconography of Mediaeval Architecture", Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, Vol. 5. (1942), pp. 1-33.Online text Archived April 8, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- Białostocki:537
- Most recently: North, John (September, 2004). The Ambassador's Secret: Holbein and the World of the Renaissance. Orion Books
- Dieter Wuttke (2017), "Erwin Panofsky (1892-1968)", in: The Routledge Companion to Medieval Iconography, ed. by Colum Hourihane, London and New York, pp. 105-122, here p. 119).
- Ralf van Bühren and Maciej Jan Jasiński (2024), The invisible divine in the history of art. Is Erwin Panofsky (1892–1968) still relevant for decoding Christian iconography?, in Church, Communication and Culture 9, pp. 1-36, here pp. 1-4, 9, 23, 28.
- Index of Medieval Art website
- Białostocki:538-39
- "Iconclass website". Iconclass.nl. Retrieved 2014-03-31.
- Illuminated manuscripts from the Dutch royal Library, browsable by ICONCLASS classification Archived 2008-02-20 at the Wayback Machine and Ross Publishing - examples of databases for sale
- website Iconclass for Flickr
- Freeman, Evan. "The life of Christ in medieval and Renaissance art – Smarthistory". Smarthistory – art history. Retrieved March 2, 2022.
- Taylor, Justin (July 18, 2013). "All the Known Audio of C.S. Lewis Speaking". The Gospel Coalition. Retrieved March 2, 2022.
- Kitzinger, Ernst, "The Cult of Images in the Age before Iconoclasm", Dumbarton Oaks Papers, Vol. 8, (1954), pp. 83–150, Dumbarton Oaks, Trustees for Harvard University, JSTOR
- "The Early Church on the Aniconic Spectrum". The Westminster Theological Journal. 83 (1): 35–47. ISSN 0043-4388. Retrieved March 2, 2022.
- Schiller:66
- Cook and Bernink (1999, 138-140).
- The first World Dictionary of Images: Laurent Gervereau (ed.), "Dictionnaire mondial des images", Paris, Nouveau monde, 2006, 1120p, ISBN 978-2-84736-185-8. (with 275 specialists from all continents, all specialities, all periods from Prehistory to nowadays); Laurent Gervereau, "Images, une histoire mondiale", Paris, Nouveau monde, 2008, 272p., ISBN 978-2-84736-362-3
- Wozniak, Antal (2020). "Stakeholders Visual Representations of Climate Change". In Holmes, David C.; Richardson, Lucy M. (eds.). Research Handbook on Communicating Climate Change. Cheltenham, Gloucestershire: Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. 131–143. ISBN 978-1-78990-040-8. OCLC 1226584969.
- Revet, Sandrine (2020). "Disaster Iconography: Victims, Rescue Workers, and Hazards". Disasterland. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 53–80. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-41582-2_3. ISBN 978-3-030-41581-5. OCLC 1153066230. S2CID 219010604.
- King, Nicholas B. (2015). "Mediating Panic: The Iconography of New Infectious Threats, 1936-2009". In Peckham, Robert (ed.). Empires of Panic: Epidemics and Colonial Anxieties. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press. pp. 181–203. ISBN 978-988-8208-44-9. OCLC 904372902.
- Johansson, Anna; Sternudd, Hans T. (2015). "Iconography of Suffering in Social Media: Images of Sitting Girls". In Anderson, R. (ed.). World Suffering and Quality of Life. Social Indicators Research Series. Vol. 56. Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 341–355. doi:10.1007/978-94-017-9670-5_26. ISBN 978-94-017-9670-5. OCLC 902846595.
- Döring, Nicola; Walter, Roberto (2021). "Ikonografien des sexuellen Kindesmissbrauchs: Symbolbilder in Presseartikeln und Präventionsmaterialien". Studies in Communication and Media. 10 (3): 362–405. doi:10.5771/2192-4007-2021-3-362. ISSN 2192-4007. S2CID 242216019.
Sources
- Alunno, Marco. Iconography and Gesamtkunstwerk in Parsifal's Two Cinematic Settings in ESM Mediamusic. No. 2 (2013)
- Białostocki, Jan, Iconography, Dictionary of The History of Ideas, Online version, University of Virginia Library, Gale Group, 2003
- Bühren, Ralf van and Maciej Jan Jasiński, The invisible divine in the history of art. Is Erwin Panofsky (1892–1968) still relevant for decoding Christian iconography?, in Church, Communication and Culture 9 (2024), pp. 1–36. DOI: 10.1080/23753234.2024.2322546
- Cook, Pam and Mieke Bernink, eds. 1999. The Cinema Book. 2nd ed. London: BFI Publishing. ISBN 0-85170-726-2.
- Schiller, Gertrud. Iconography of Christian Art, Vol. I,1971 (English trans from German), Lund Humphries, London, ISBN 0-85331-270-2
- Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae (LIMC), Artemis Verlag, 1981-2009
External links
Library resources aboutIconography
- The Warburg Institute Iconographic Database
- Iconography of Deities and Demons in the Ancient Near East (Project of the Swiss National Science Foundation at the Universities of Zurich and Fribourg)
- Web site for European Sacred Mountains, Calvaries and Devotional Complexes
- Sacred Icons in Modern Era about the Cult of Great Mother
- LIMC-France—iconography of ancient mythology.
- Christian Iconography
- What iconographers do - case study Archived 2005-08-27 at the Wayback Machine
- "Semiotics and Iconography" from the Handbook of Visual Analysis