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If it is true that a painting can 'think visually', then it is also
true that Diderot was the first to say so - and he has spelled out
this concept better than anyone else. Diderot's Salons show that
the 'imaginal' sense that arises from the engagement with a picture
needs to be investigated using the concepts of ekphrasis and
theatricality - the capacity to explore the power of pictures in
relation to the composition of the scene, to the expressive and
pantomimic gestures, and to what can be called a 'theory of
affections'. The book will focus on an issue that pertains to the
theory of pictures, on a question that is ground-breaking in the
English-speaking academic context: how can we look at a picture in
order to rethink aesthetics as a discipline that allows us to look
at pictures from a philosophical point of view? The Salons
demonstrate that the 'imaginal' process leading to knowledge always
emerges from the picture itself, and that this process always needs
to be supported by a method of inquiry that can rightly be called a
philosophical method - as Diderot was a philosopher himself. Even
when approaching this issue from a contemporary perspective, this
method should always be related to the concepts of ekphrasis and
theatricality. Fundamental, however, is also the 'pathetic', the
emotionally stimulating, due to its essential relation to the
enjoyment of pictures - something rooted in aesthetic
disinterestedness, absorption and, conversely, voyeurism.
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