Can painting transform philosophy? In "Inventing Falsehood,
Making Truth," Malcolm Bull looks at Neapolitan art around 1700
through the eyes of the philosopher Giambattista Vico. Surrounded
by extravagant examples of late Baroque painting by artists like
Luca Giordano and Francesco Solimena, Vico concluded that human
truth was a product of the imagination. Truth was not something
that could be observed: instead, it was something made in the way
that paintings were made--through the exercise of fantasy.
Juxtaposing paintings and texts, Bull presents the masterpieces
of late Baroque painting in early eighteenth-century Naples from an
entirely new perspective. Revealing the close connections between
the arguments of the philosophers and the arguments of the
painters, he shows how Vico drew on both in his influential
philosophy of history, "The New Science." Bull suggests that
painting can serve not just as an illustration for philosophical
arguments, but also as the model for them--that painting itself has
sometimes been a form of epistemological experiment, and that,
perhaps surprisingly, the Neapolitan Baroque may have been one of
the routes through which modern consciousness was formed.
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