Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles > 1400 to 1600 > Renaissance art
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The Moment of Self-Portraiture in German Renaissance Art (Paperback, New edition)
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The Moment of Self-Portraiture in German Renaissance Art (Paperback, New edition)
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The self-portrait has become a model of what art is: the artwork is
the image of its maker, and understanding the work means recovering
from it an original vision of the artist. In this ground-breaking
work, Joseph Leo Koerner analyzes the historical origin of this
model in the art of Albrecht Durer and Hans Baldung Grien, the
first modern self-portraitist and his principal disciple. By doing
so, he develops new approaches to the visual image and to its
history in early modern European culture. Koerner establishes the
character of German Renaissance art by considering how Durer's and
Baldung's pictures register changes in the status of the self
during the sixteenth century. He contends that Durer's
self-portrait of 1500, modeled after icons of Christ, reinvented
art for new conditions of piety, labor, patronage, and
self-understanding at the eve of the Reformation. So foundational
is this invention to modern aesthetics, Koerner argues, that
interpreting it takes us to the limits of traditional
art-historical method. Self-portraiture becomes legible less
through a history leading up to it, or through a sum of contexts
that occasion it, than through its historical sight-line to the
present. After a thorough examination of Durer's startlingly new
self-portraits, the author turns to the work of Baldung, Durer's
most gifted pupil, and demonstrates how the apprentice willfully
disfigured Durer's vision. Baldung replaced the master's
self-portraits with some of the most obscene and bizarre pictures
in the history of art. In images of nude witches, animated
cadavers, and copulating horses, Baldung portrays the debased self
of the viewer as the true subject of art. The Moment of
Self-Portraiturethus unfolds as passages from teacher to student,
artist to viewer, reception, all within a culture that at once
deified and abhorred originality. Koerner writes a new,
philosophical art history in which the visual image is both
document of history and living vehicle of thought. He demonstrates
the extent to which novel ideas about self and interpretation
invented by Renaissance artists and Reformation thinkers informed
modern hermeneutics and helped to found our deepest assumptions
about art and its messages.
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