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1
The History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline
  • Erwin Panofsky (1955)

2
History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline
  • I. The history of the concept (Humanitas -
    Humanism - Humanities)
  • II. The object of study steps (humanities /
    natural sciences)
  • III. The material of study (natural phenomena /
    works of art)
  • IV. Methods of interpretation / explanation
    (humanities / natural sciences)
  • V. Why humanities?

3
History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline (I)
  • I. The history of the concept
  • Humanitas - Humanism - Humanities
  • humanitas has had two clearly distinguishable
    meanings
  • 1. Man and what is less than man (animality)
  • 2. Man and what is more than man (divinity)
  • humanism ambivalence bw rationality / freedom
    and fallibility / frailty results in the
    humanistic postulate of reponsibility and
    tolerance as human values

4
History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline (II)
  • II. The object of study and steps
  • Mans signs and structures are records because,
    or rather in so far as, they express ideas
    separated from, yet realized by, the processes of
    signaling and building. These records have
    therefore the quality of emerging from the
    streams of time, and it is precisely in this
    respect that they are studied by the humanist. He
    is, fundamentally, an historian.

5
History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline (II)
  • II. The object of study and steps
  • humanities
  • tradition, records of the past, historical facts
    (documents, structures)
  • examination of records
  • the cosmos of culture

6
History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline (II)
  • II. The object of study and steps
  • sciences
  • naturally found objects, phenomena, laws of
    nature
  • the cosmos of nature

7
History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline (II)
  • II. The object of study and steps
  • Relationship bw monuments, documents and a
    general historical concept in the humanities
  • Relationship between phenomena, instruments and
    theory in the natural sciences

8
History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline (III)
  • III. The material of study (What is a work of
    art?)
  • Issue of artistic / authorial intention and its
    rootedness in a particular historical period
    (objects are conditioned by the standards of
    their period and environment)
  • Our interpretation of intentions are biased by
    our own attitude which is based on our own
    individual experiences and historical situation

9
History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline (IV)
  • IV. Methods of interpretation / explanation
  • humanities / natural sciences
  • Scientists deal with natural phenomena
    (explanation in terms of objective, repeatable
    examination of physical reality)
  • Humanists deal with human actions and creations
    (explanation is intuitive aesthetic re-creation
    reconstruction mentally needs to re-enact the
    actions and re-create the creations )

10
History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline (IV)
  • IV. Methods of interpretation / explanation
  • humanities / natural sciences
  • Humanist method (organic situation,
    re-constructive terminology)
  • to study the formal principles that control the
    rendering of the visible world (familiarizes
    himself with the social, religious and
    philosophical attitudes of other periods and
    countries, continually checking own experiences
    against archaeological research)
  • Paradox How, then, is it possible to build up
    art history as a respectable scholarly
    discipline, if its very objects come into being
    by an irrational and subjective process?

11
History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline (IV)
  • IV. Methods of interpretation
  • Appreciationism (naïve observers)
  • Connoisseurship (clinical examination in terms of
    provenance and authorship, evaluation in terms of
    quality and condition)
  • Art history (observers using established
    terminology that expresses broader structures
    stylistic distinctions, rhetoric of expression)
  • Art theory (access to structures, formal elements
    of art)

12
History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline (V)
  • V. Why humanities?
  • If humanities are not practical, because they
    concern themselves with the past, why should we
    engage in such impractical investigations, and
    why should we be interested in the past?
  • Because It is impossible to conceive of our
    world in terms of action alone reality involves
    interpretation of reality the moment one thinks
    it contemplation of reality not at the surface

13
History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline (V)
  • V. Why humanities? Reality is understood as
    inter-penetration of world in terms of thought
    and in terms of action.
  • When I said that the man who is run over by an
  • automobile is run over by mathematics, physics
    and
  • chemistry, I could just as well have said that he
    is run
  • over by Euclid, Archimedes and Lavoisier
  • (Panofsky 1975, 23)
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