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Richard Wollheim on the Art of Painting

Richard Wollheim on the Art of Painting

Richard Wollheim on the Art of Painting

Art as Representation and Expression
Rob Gerwen, Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands
July 2007
Paperback
9780521038300
$52.00
USD
Paperback
USD
Hardback

    Richard Wollheim is one of the dominant figures in the philosophy of art, whose work has shown not only how paintings create their effects but why they remain important to us. His influential writings have focused on two core, interrelated questions: how do paintings depict? And how do they express feelings? In this collection of essays a distinguished group of thinkers in the fields of art history and philosophical aesthetics offers a critical assessment of Wollheim's theory of art. Among the themes under discussion are Wollheim's explanation of pictorial representation in terms of seeing-in, his views of artistic expression as a type of complex projection, and his notion of the internal spectator. In the final essay Wollheim himself responds to the contributors. This book will be eagerly sought out by all serious students of the theory of art, whether in departments of philosophy or art history.

    • High-profile team of contributors from philosophy and art history
    • Wollheim (Press author) is, along with Ernst Gombrich, the most influential contemporary philosopher of art
    • Books on aesthetics, appealing to both philosophers and art historians, tend to do well for us

    Reviews & endorsements

    "No large library collection will be complete without commentary on this major aesthetician, and small collections will benefit from the inclusion of this handy, single volume to address inquiries on art, art history, methodology, painting theory, and criticism." Art Documentation

    "Wolheim's discipline of philosophical aesthetics and art history is honored and scrutinized in this highly profound book.... In spite of the fact that the book is almost imageless, it will engage every serious art historian and philosopher of art.... Highly recommended." Choice

    "This is an important volume." Philosophy in Review

    See more reviews

    Product details

    July 2001
    Hardback
    9780521801744
    300 pages
    237 × 161 × 27 mm
    0.528kg
    7 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • List of contributors
    • Relevant works by Richard Wollheim and their abbreviations as used in this volume
    • Preface
    • Introduction Rob van Gerwen
    • Part I. Representation:
    • 1. On pictorial representation Richard Wollheim
    • 2. Wollheim on pictorial representation Jerrold Levinson
    • 3. The limits of twofoldness: a defence of the concept of pictorial thought Andrew Harrison
    • 4. A hypothesis about seeing-in Monique Roelofs
    • 5. Communication and the art of painting Anthony Savile
    • 6. Twofoldedness: from transcendental imagination to pictorial art Paul Crowther
    • Part II. Expression:
    • 7. Wollheim on correspondence, projective properties and expressive perception Malcolm Budd
    • 8. The artistry of depiction Michael Podro
    • 9. Style and value in the art of painting Carolyn Wilde
    • 10. Expression as representation Rob van Gerwen
    • 11. Wollheim on expression (and representation) Graham McFee
    • Part III. The Internal Spectator:
    • 12. Viewing making painting Svetlana Alpers
    • 13. The staging of spectatorship Renée van de Vall
    • 14. Presentation or representation Susan L. Feagin
    • 15. The case for the internal spectator: aesthetics or art history? Caroline van Eck
    • 16. The spectator in the picture Robert Hopkins
    • 17. A word on behalf of 'the merely visual' Michael Baxandall
    • Part IV. Reply:
    • 18. A reply to the contributors Richard Wollheim
    • Bibliography
    • Index.
      Contributors
    • Rob van Gerwen, Richard Wollheim, Jerrold Levinson, Andrew Harrison, Monique Roelofs, Anthony Savile, Paul Crowther, Malcolm Budd, Michael Podro, Carolyn Wilde, Graham McFee, Svetlana Alpers, Renée van de Vall, Susan L. Feagin, Caroline van Eck, Robert Hopkins, Michael Baxandall

    • Editor
    • Rob Gerwen , Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands