Essays in Journals and Chapters in Books by barbara baert
M&Others: Fashion & Motherhood, 2024
I recall from my childhood that our street, the Marckstraat (‘mark’ after
boundaries and the rive... more I recall from my childhood that our street, the Marckstraat (‘mark’ after
boundaries and the river of the same name that originates there),
terminated in a vast dark pool called the Black Water. I was not allowed
to go there under any circumstances; it was a terrifying place where you could lose your way or, worse still, be dragged under. Besides, there was a legend that girls who ventured to the edge of the marsh would suffer misfortune in motherhood.
In the curse that clings to the Black Water resonates a deeper archetype
that casts the marsh as the sanctuary of the Mother Goddess. In this essay I attempt to open up this dark chthonic space. For it is on the brink of the abyss that humans discern the caverns of symbolic thought, and marvel at the infinite dark energy of motherhood in iconography and myth.
Cutting the Gaze. Salome in Andrea Solario’s Oeuvre, c. 1465–1524, in Campaspe Talks Back, Festschrift for Katlijne Van der Stichelen, eds. Lieke van Deinsen, Bert Schepers, Marjan Sterckx, Hans Vlieghe & Bert Watteeuw, Turnhout (Brepols Publishers), 2024, p. 18-27 Campaspe Talks Back, Festschrift for Katlijne Van der Stichelen, 2024
In this essay, I consider the northern Italian iconographic interpretations of Salome and the hea... more In this essay, I consider the northern Italian iconographic interpretations of Salome and the head of St John the Baptist in Andrea Solario’s oeuvre (c. 1465–1524). Solario’s iconographic innovations provide an excellent case study for understanding how Salome was staged as an intermediary between the Baptist’s head and the beholder. I also discuss Solario’s ability to unite the pictorial tradition of Salome with the genre of the early modern portrait on the one hand and with the iconographic tradition of the paragone debate on the other. Solario’s innovations emancipated
Salome from the biblical narrative, transforming her into a means of
showing what painting, when anchored in gaze, flesh, and death, is capable of.
Primordial Winds. Cosmogony and Breath*
Barbara Baert – KU Leuven
The representation, evocatio... more Primordial Winds. Cosmogony and Breath*
Barbara Baert – KU Leuven
The representation, evocation and suggestion of wind in the visual arts touches on fundamental ideas relating to the anthropology of the senses and their descent into the visual medium. Wind is a natural phenomenon that plays on the entire sensorium of the body. Wind is tactile. Wind can be heard. Wind carries scents. Wind is a cosmic breath that envelops and penetrates us. Wind nourishes or destroys.
Even our own bodies produce and inhale wind. The wind is related to the breath that exits and enters our bodies, even to the gases our organs emit. Wind is both the lower – the anal eruption – and the higher – the breath we need. But there is also a third “wind” in our body. In the Greek philosophy of Aristotle (384-322 BC), the concept of pneuma is central to both breath and spirit. It is the vital energy of life, literally, the “gas” that occupies the brain and is responsible for thought, perception and movement. One receives this vital energy at birth and each human being refreshes this energy continually by drawing breath.
Heavenly Fragrance Late Medieval Enclosed Gardens of the Low Countries and the Senses, in (Er-)Leben von Spiritualität, eds. Jonas Narchi e.a. (Klöster als Innovationslabore, 14), Heidelberg, 2024, p. 219-238., 2024
The early sixteenth-century Enclosed Gardens or Horti Conclusi of the Augustinian Hospital Sister... more The early sixteenth-century Enclosed Gardens or Horti Conclusi of the Augustinian Hospital Sisters of Mechelen form an exceptional part of late medieval world heritage. Most Enclosed Gardens have been lost, through the ravages of time or exacerbated by lack of understanding and interest. No fewer than seven Enclosed Gardens, however, were preserved until the late twentieth century in their original context: the small community of Augustinian nuns in Mechelen. Like ‘sleeping beauties’, they remained secluded in the sisters’ rooms as aids to devotion. They testify to a cultural identity connected with strong mystical traditions; they are a gateway to a lost world, an essential part of the rich material and immaterial culture of the Southern Netherlands in the early sixteenth century. To preserve the seven 16th-century Enclosed Gardens in the Hof van Busleyden in Mechelen a main conservation project was established in 2014, ending in 2019. The extraordinary 16th century religious ensembles with their wide variety of artefacts, complex composition, employment of numerous materials and techniques, demanded a multidisciplinary conservation
approach. The Enclosed Garden Project 2014–2019 was supported by the Fund Baillet Latour of the King Baudouin Foundation, Belgium and received Brain Belspo Research Funding 2016–2020 for the ArtGarden Project: Research Enclosed Gardens and preventive conservation of Mixed-Media objects. The conservation project resulted in an exhibition in
2016: In Search of Utopia: Art and Science in the Era of Thomas More in Museum M, Leuven and a monograph; The Enclosed Gardens are on permanent display in Hof van Busleyden, Mechelen.
Bark / Birch / Birkenau. (A Conversation with Giuseppe Penone, Georges Didi-Huberman and Gerhard Richter), in Textile. Cloth and Culture, 22, 2, 2024, p. 1-9., 2024
Giuseppe Penone's 2007 chamber installation Sculture di linfa (“juice sculpture”) consists of a w... more Giuseppe Penone's 2007 chamber installation Sculture di linfa (“juice sculpture”) consists of a white marble floor in Carrara marble (fig.). The floor is elaborated as a bas-relief with the veins of the brain. On top of the floor are hollowed tree trunks with a fine recess, in which red resin flows. The walls of the room are completely covered with large leather sheets. Those who get closer see that the skins show the imprints of tree bark, which was left in the leather support through a complex tanning and wetting process. It is the inside of the molds that Penone exhibits, and not the mimetic outside of the bark-leather. The room Sculture di linfa is thus lined by the monumental negatives of the bark - between printmaking and sculpture - and thus exposes itself as the inner body of a forest.
Notes on Galileo’s Moon, in Contemplatio in the Visual Arts and Literature (1400-1700): Festschrift for Walter S. Melion, eds. Stijn Bussels, Karl A.E. Enenkel, Michel Weemans, and Elliott D. Wise, (Intersections, 88), Brill, 2024, p. 464-477. Notes on Galileo’s Moon, in Contemplatio in the Visual Arts and Literature (1400-1700): Festschrift for Walter S. Melion, eds.Stijn Bussels, Karl A.E. Enenkel, Michel Weemans, and Elliott D. Wise, (Intersections, 88), Brill, 2024, p. 464-477.
In this essay, I highlight a lesser-known aspect of Galileo Galilei’s (1564–1642) character, name... more In this essay, I highlight a lesser-known aspect of Galileo Galilei’s (1564–1642) character, namely the role that he played in the artistic milieu of his day.
As a humanist, Galileo befriended many of the artists in his milieu. Thus,
his telescopic ‘eye’ came into contact with the actual eyes of contemporary
visual artists. Erwin Panofsky’s essay, “Galileo as a Critic of the Arts: Aesthetic
Attitude and Scientific, Thought” (1956), on Galileo’s friendship with Ludovico
Cigoli (1559–1613) and, more particularly, his advice for the Madonna of the
Immaculata Assunta in the dome of the Pauline chapel (1612) of Santa Maria
Maggiore (Rome). is a suitable starting point.*,1
Notes to Galileo’s Moon explores the tension between the human eye, the
lens, and the arts – one that was also fueled by the key debate of the era: the
paragone, or the hierarchical struggle between the artistic disciplines. I will
show how Galileo’s ‘scientific gaze’ was not distinct from a ‘painterly gaze.’ For
Galileo the telescope was more than a technical refinement for observation; it
was it was an optical prosthesis he used to reach for the artistic image through
contemplation.
The critical moment. Revisiting the Annunciation in the Quattrocento: Wind, Kairos, Snail, in “Marian Images in Context: Doctrines, Devotions, and Cults,” edited by James Clifton, Barbara Haeger & Elliott Wise, Leiden: Brill, 2023, p. 173-214. The conventional compositions of the Annunciation—such as in the Cortona piece (1433–1434) by Fra... more The conventional compositions of the Annunciation—such as in the Cortona piece (1433–1434) by Fra Angelico—show an angel entering the pictorial space from the left (Fig. 1a). This conforms to our Western direction of reading. Marin calls this horizontal scheme the narratif. The composition tells a story. We see that there is something happening: an angel enters the space and addresses a woman. The two-part symmetrical composition that the Annunciation demands also accentuates the two-part division between the messenger and the receiver of the message, between the emanation of a divine, immaterial reality, and an inhabitant of material reality. The axis—the space between Mary and the angel—holds a threshold, an interval, a snapshot. This locus intervallus is pictorially and iconographically signalled by the lily, and it is articulated by a spatial border of the dwelling (such as a loggia, the border between open garden and an enclosed chamber) or accentuated by the vanishing points of the spatial perspective itself. For these reasons, the pictorial space of the Annunciation is the figurabilité du mystère. This mystery needs the invisible to make it visible and vice versa. That is why painting launches the visible as the medium of the invisible. What solutions did artists find? What artistic conventions were developed over time? I will further explore the answers to these questions by looking at the concepts of ruach (wind) and speech.
Ovide raconte l’histoire d’Écho et de Narcisse dans le troisième livre des Métamorphoses . L’amou... more Ovide raconte l’histoire d’Écho et de Narcisse dans le troisième livre des Métamorphoses . L’amour unilatéral d’Écho pour Narcisse lui valut une cruelle destinée. Outre le châtiment écholalique qui frappa la nymphe volubile, le corps d’Écho se dessécha jusqu’à ce que ses os fussent amalgamés aux rochers (Fig. 1). Les historiens de l’art, reconduisant le dédain de Narcisse, n’ont pas montré beaucoup d’intérêt pour la nymphe. Longtemps, l’histoire de l’art ne semble avoir eu d’yeux que pour le reflet chatoyant de Narcisse, que Leon Battista Alberti avait promu au rang de scène primitive de la peinture . Dans De pictura on peut lire ceci : « Cela étant, j’aime à dire en mon privé que l’inventeur de la peinture a été, pour parler comme les poètes, ce Narcisse qui fut métamorphosé en fleur : si la peinture est la fleur de tous les arts, alors la fable entière de Narcisse est parfaitement appropriée. »
Face à ce paradigme décidément insubmersible d’une histoire de l’art andro-scopo-centrée, Echo n’a jamais vraiment pu l’emporter. La nymphe demeure le « point aveugle » de l’Histoire de l’Art .
The point of departure for this chapter is the centerpiece of Ovid’s Metamorphoses (6.146–312): N... more The point of departure for this chapter is the centerpiece of Ovid’s Metamorphoses (6.146–312): Niobe’s transformation into a weeping rock. Niobe’s transformation incorporates the form and matter of the medium of sculpture. According to the humanist paragone debate, painting and sculpture compete to be the medium with the highest qualities of virtuosity. In the first part of the chapter, I explore the iconographic deployment of Niobe in the paragone rivalry, taking up examples from the field of tension between the second and third dimensions, between grisaille and stone, between figurative and non-figurative.
Aby Warburg refers to the Niobe motif’s Nachleben in his Tafel 5: Beraubte Mutter. (Niobe, Flucht und Schrecken). This displays the images of both the bereaved mother (Niobe) and the murderous mother (Medea). The montage also introduces the theme of the descent to the Underworld. It becomes clear how the cluster of motifs around the figure of Niobe— hybris, lamentatio and the chthonic substrate—functions as a direct entry to a bipolar hermeneutics of the visual medium: the “historical psychology of human expression” that navigates between Apollo and Dionysus. By extension we can consider how the Niobe motif is an externalization of the furthest boundaries of what human artistic expression can achieve: the unending tribute to love, but also the ceaseless struggle against death.
In David Grossmans roman Jij bent mijn mes zegt Yair aan Myriam:
"Kon ik je maar anders schrijv... more In David Grossmans roman Jij bent mijn mes zegt Yair aan Myriam:
"Kon ik je maar anders schrijven, was ik maar iemand die anders schrijft. Al die wollige woorden. Eigenlijk had het ook erg simpel kunnen zijn, toch? Zoiets als: ‘Zeg het maar kind, waar doet het zeer?’ En ik doe mijn ogen heel stijf dicht en schrijf zo snel als ik kan: laat deze volstrekt vreemden de vreemdheid zelf verslaan, het machtige, gebiedende beginsel van de vreemdheid. (…) Ja, dat wil ik, dat je mijn mes bent, en ik zal het jouwe zijn, dat beloof ik, een scherp mes. Maar dan met meelij (sic), om met jou te spreken, ik wist niet eens dat dat word nog gebruikt mocht worden, zo teer en zacht van klank, een word zonder huid (als je het een paar keer achter elkaar hardop zegt, kun je daar iets van leem (sic) in voelen, harde en droge leemgrond op het moment dat water in de barsten begint door te sijpelen. Je bent moe, ik dwing mezelf om welterusten te zeggen”.
Jij bent mijn mes is een briefroman over een uniek emotioneel en narratief experiment. Yair voelt een onbestemde ontroering bij het zien van de rug en hals van een onbekende vrouw, Myriam. Yair zal nooit haar gezicht kennen, immers, uitsluitend in de onbekendheid van het gelaat kan hij haar mes zijn. Grossman beschouwt het mes als een literaire metafoor voor een intimiteit die uniek beleefd wordt in het lichaam van de taal. Het is het mes van de gelegenheid dat zich, aldus de auteur, bedient van een mysterieus tussenruimte: de zeldzame en precaire ‘opening van het bijna’. De opening van het bijna is de plaats waar de omwenteling onmiskenbaar radicaal wordt en het inzicht onontkoombaar en overrompelend.
Deze schok overkomt Yair.
De Antieken kenden een godheid voor het kantelmoment in de diachrone tijd: Kairós of de gelegenheidsgod.
Toen de 16de-eeuwse overschildering van het lam op het Lam Gods (1430-1432) verwijderd werd, kwam... more Toen de 16de-eeuwse overschildering van het lam op het Lam Gods (1430-1432) verwijderd werd, kwam een ander dier tevoorschijn (afb. 1a-b). Het lam bleek geen snuit te hebben, maar veeleer een gelaat met ogen vooraan geplaatst in plaats van opzij. De oorspronkelijke schildering van het lam werd later gelaakt als een démarche, een middeleeuwse naïveteit die met 16de-eeuwse expertise moest worden overschilderd en gecorrigeerd. Niettemin bezaten Jan van Eyck (ca. 1390 - 1441) & Hubert van Eyck (ca. 1370 - 1426) met hun buitengewoon observatievermogen een onberispelijke kennis van de fauna en flora. De Meesters schilderden in plaats van het ‘natuurlijke’ lam, immers het ‘theologische’ lam: het lam Gods van de Openbaring met gouden stralenbundel.
Bij de van Eycks wordt het apocalyptische lam een unieke, indringende gedaante, begiftigd met een haast menselijke blik als van de Mensenzoon zelf. Eén detail van de lamsogen ontlenen de schilders echter aan de dierlijke soort zelf: de overdwarse pupil die de geiten, de schapen en de herten gegeven is. Als kwetsbare prooidieren biedt de horizontale pupil hen een groter breedte-zicht. Waar het waakzame lam van de gebroeders van Eyck allicht breder kan gade slaan dan de menselijke soort, daar spiegelt het lam Gods Zijn frontale blik met de eigentijdse toeschouwer, en ja, na al die eeuwen ook met u en ik.
In the last thirty years, images have been a focus of scholarship from many different viewpoints,... more In the last thirty years, images have been a focus of scholarship from many different viewpoints,
and they have been pivotal in the many scholarly movements, or “turns”, attempting to
methodologically reframe the study of art history in general. Can you briefly explain which was
your original focus of interest and in which directions your scholarly approach developed over
the course of time?
In 2004, at the beginning of my academic career, I became involved in an interdisciplinary
research program on one verse: John 20, 17. The research team consisted of an exegete,
an anthropologist, and myself as an art historian. For me, the Noli me tangere project
was not only pars pro toto for a turn into the senses, but also led to the concept of Interspace.
Interspace concerns the “magnetic field” between word and image, or the methodical
translation of a literary corpus into the iconographic tradition. The insights from
this interdisciplinary collaboration, have given me the methodological resilience for the
follow-up projects on the iconography of the bleeding woman from Mark, and on the
context of the so-called Johannesschüssel.
These latter projects not only challenged the relationship between high & low material
culture, but also fundamentally questioned the original concept of Interspace once
again. Where iconography appeared to have no safety net in primary sources, and knowledge
of functions of textless phenomena remained “blind,” other approaches forced themselves
upon us.
In this paper, I explore the iconographical relationship between the letters and the
support on f... more In this paper, I explore the iconographical relationship between the letters and the
support on fol. 157r of the Morgan Gospels, written and illuminated in Westphalia,
Germany during the mid-tenth century. On the basis of its formal properties and the
iconographic meaning it takes, I will give particular attention to the materiality of the
Latin text and its cultural and symbolic significance. The folio under study develops a
form of ‘agency’. With this perspective, I hope not only to contribute to the important
line of argument Joshua O’Driscoll develops in his iconic article, but also to explore
the meaning of Latin as an iconological statement and hence to contribute with new
methodological developments in the field of art history.
Since the Early Christian origin of the theme of the Annunciation to Mary, scholars have been con... more Since the Early Christian origin of the theme of the Annunciation to Mary, scholars have been concerned with its iconography and the legitimacy of the culture of the image as such. For is not the mystery of God-become-flesh precisely the emanation of an invisible Visage into the visibility of the Son? And is not this emanation analogous to that other mystery: the possibility of expressing the divine artistically – tracing it in line and colour in the world of time and space?
This brings me to the subject of this paper: ‘the now-time’. The Annunciation touches on a startling double paradox. The Incarnation continues to escape us due to its ‘visible invisibility,’ but also installs this mystery of the image in a split second, in a breach in time, as in Eliot’s the unattended Moment, the moment in and out of time. This is the Kairos or the ‘occasion time’: the interval between moments that holds potential. In the ‘now’ they turn into ‘pregnant moments’. Hence, in this essay I will revisit the Quattrocento iconography of the Annunciation from the standpoint of ‘Kairotic energy’. I will argue that by looking at the works of Sandro Botticelli (1444–1510) and Francesco del Cossa (1436-1478) the devotional interchange between image and beholder in this period is unlocked by pictorial (self-)reflection on the Incarnation as the ‘critical moment’.
presents itself, but just as swiftly disappears, has an interesting Nachleben in art, theology, a... more presents itself, but just as swiftly disappears, has an interesting Nachleben in art, theology, and philosophy,
and represents the unique chance to grasp, the «critical moment» for a certain action, the
fate that swiftly passes in order to change the course of (life)time. Indeed, «there are processes of
nature which, though determined in accordance with chronos, cannot be exhaustively understood
from the standpoint of chronos time. For in these processes, chronos attains to “critical points” and
thus begins to take on qualitative character»1. Kairos refers to a knowledge system that binds qualitative
time and space together in a knot so perfect that it provides the only possible occasion» or
«truth». The knot is «suitable» to grab when the moment is «right», that is why the term is also used
in ancient medical texts. If even one parameter of the intersection is missing, the moment becomes
unbalanced and the knot becomes unstable. In this first collection of aphorisms, written around
400 BC, Hippocrates (460-377 BC) says: «Life (bios) is short, and art (techne¯) long; the crisis (kairos)
is fleeting; experience is perilous, and decision is difficult. The physician must not only be prepared
to do what is right, but also to make the patient, the attendants, and externals cooperate»2 (fig. 1).
In this essay, I will explore the earliest traces of the Kairos concept in Early Christian Art. First, I
will focus on the dynamics between the Greek and Latin transformation in exegesis and texts. Second,
I discuss new iconographic examples and interpretations in for instance Coptic art3.
Erwin Panofsky (1892-1968) heeft onmiskenbaar een grote impact
gehad op de kunsthistorische metho... more Erwin Panofsky (1892-1968) heeft onmiskenbaar een grote impact
gehad op de kunsthistorische methode. Als Joodse émigré
uit Duitsland, en als de eerste kunsthistoricus aan het befaamde
Institute for Advanced Study te Princeton (1935), heeft hij het
vakgebied een onnavolgbaar statuut gegeven binnen de humane
wetenschappen. Onder andere ‘The History of Art as a Human -
istic Discipline’ (1938), Studies in Iconology. Humanistic
Themes in the Art of the Renaissance (1939), The Life and Art
of Albrecht Dürer (1943) en Gothic Architecture and Scho las -
ticism (1951) zijn nog steeds standaardwerken.
De impact van Erwin Panofsky op de mediëvistiek en bij uitbreiding
op de humane wetenschappen is onmiskenbaar. Zijn intellectuele
invloed is nog steeds prominent in het onderzoek naar de middeleeuwse
kunst en architectuur, de interpretatie van de symboliek in
de schilderkunst van de Vlaamse Primitieven en de receptie van de
Oudheid tijdens de Vroegmoderne Tijd. Zijn methode om kunst te
begrijpen op basis van visuele conventies, literaire tradities en culturele
topoi – iconologie genaamd – maakt deel uit van de twintigste
en eenentwintigste-eeuwse wetenschapsgeschiedenis.
In deze bijdrage wil ik ingaan op één welbepaald tijdsfragment
uit het leven en werk van Erwin Panofsky: zijn aankomst in de Ver -
enigde Staten tijdens de jaren dertig van de twintigste eeuw, en het
manifest dat hij schreef niet lang na zijn aanstelling in Princeton:
‘The History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline’.
Silence, in The Museum of Renaissance Music. A History of 100 Exhibits, eds. Vincenzo Borghetti &... more Silence, in The Museum of Renaissance Music. A History of 100 Exhibits, eds. Vincenzo Borghetti & Tim Shephard, Brepols – Turnhout, 2023, p. 21-24.
Mark 6:14-29 and Matthew 14:1-12 recount Herod’s feats and the death of John the Baptist. Herod h... more Mark 6:14-29 and Matthew 14:1-12 recount Herod’s feats and the death of John the Baptist. Herod had the prophet imprisoned for denouncing as incestuous his marriage to Herodias, the former wife of his brother. During a festive banquet, Herodias’ daughter dances before Herod, who is so enchanted that he promises her a favour. At her mother’s behest, she asks for the head of John the Baptist. The king honours her request and has the head delivered to her on a plate (in disco), which she gives to her mother. When John’s disciples discover his death, they bury his headless body.
In Mark’s plot the motif of dance and by extension of Salome demonstrate a peculiar spatial energy: the way in which Salome is placed in different rooms is confusing and seems flighty. It starts with verse 22, where the daughter comes in (cumque introisset filia ipsius). Then, in verse 24, when she has finished her dance and Herod’s oath has inescapably been made, she leaves the room and asks her mother for advice. Her mother then whispers the fatal demand into her ear (quae cum exisset dixit matri). In verse 25, the pace of the story picks up. Salome re-enters the room and immediately addresses the king with haste (cumque introisset statim cum festinatione). At this point, the events are interrupted by the beheading in the prison after which, in verse 28, the executioner gives the head to the girl, and the girl gives the head to the mother (et adtulit caput eius in disco et dedit illud puellae et puella dedit matri suae). The first transfer of the head, according to the context, happens in the hall where the party is held, while the second is suggested to have happened in a different room, since earlier, she had to leave to go see her mother. In short, she comes in, she leaves, she hastily goes in again, she receives the platter, she gives the platter to the mother.
The French literary critic René Girard (1923-2015) wrote a fascinating essay on the role of the dancing girl in Mark’s plot. The author develops the motif from the concept of “mimetic desire”. “Salome is a child. She has nothing to do with the dance of the seven veils and other orientalia,” writes Girard (Girard 1984, 311-324). The child imitates her mother’s wish and from the moment she is filled with this wish, the girl crosses a certain threshold. It is said in Mark that the girl hastens back (Cum festinatione), and immediately demands John’s head in disco. The acceleration reflects the intensification of the plot that will converge in what Girard calls “mimetic violence”. Girard writes: “At first she is a blank sheet of desire, then, in one instant, she shifts to the height of mimetic violence (Girard 1984, 314)”. This peculiar rite of passage enacts itself in an inevitable determination of moments: from the silent dance, to the king’s giving voice to the oath, to the mother’s wish fulfilled, culminating in the dazzling horror of a head on a platter offered during a banquet. In this essay I revisit the iconographic motif of the dancing girl from an interdisciplinary perspective involving exegesis, space, ritual performance and Pathosformeln.
Eine Antwort auf Echo. Jenseits von Mimesis oder Auflösung als skopisches Ordnungsmuster (mit besondererAufemerksamkeit für Camouflage), in „Challenging the Iconic Turn. Positionen – Methoden – Perspektiven,” eds. Dominic Delarue and Christoph Wagner, Berlin – De Gruyter, 2023, p. 5-26.
Echo ahmt mit der Sprache nach, während ihr Körper langsam verschwindet. Nichtsdestotrotz – und m... more Echo ahmt mit der Sprache nach, während ihr Körper langsam verschwindet. Nichtsdestotrotz – und möglicherweise genau darum – behält sie die Macht der Stimme. Echo ruft. Sie ruft nach einer Alternatieve für das Paradigma des Spiegels. Ihre Liebe und Opferbereitschaft ereignen sich außerhalb des Blicks, sie lösen das Bild aus dem üblichen Okularzentrismus. Echo emanzipiert sich von Narziss mit ihrer eigenen paradoxen Kraft: Auflösung, Camouflage und Verschmelzung. Ihr selbstloses Verschwinden, ein Akt der Gegenwehr gegen ein dominantes, ichbezogenes Blickregime wird unter folgenden Aspekten erkundet: Gender, Sprache und Gehör, Echo als ‘Verstofflichung‘, Auflösung als sich aufopfernde Hingabe. Hiermit möchte ich eine Alternative zum Narciss-Paradigma anbieten und aus einer interdisziplinären Perspektive den Forschungshorizont aufbrechen, indem auch Sprache und sonorischen Sinnesorganen, der Theorie der Camouflage, weiblichen Erkenntnismodellen und den anthropologischen Substraten der Naturelemente, der Liebe und des Todes, eine wesentliche Rolle zugedacht wird.
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Essays in Journals and Chapters in Books by barbara baert
boundaries and the river of the same name that originates there),
terminated in a vast dark pool called the Black Water. I was not allowed
to go there under any circumstances; it was a terrifying place where you could lose your way or, worse still, be dragged under. Besides, there was a legend that girls who ventured to the edge of the marsh would suffer misfortune in motherhood.
In the curse that clings to the Black Water resonates a deeper archetype
that casts the marsh as the sanctuary of the Mother Goddess. In this essay I attempt to open up this dark chthonic space. For it is on the brink of the abyss that humans discern the caverns of symbolic thought, and marvel at the infinite dark energy of motherhood in iconography and myth.
Salome from the biblical narrative, transforming her into a means of
showing what painting, when anchored in gaze, flesh, and death, is capable of.
Barbara Baert – KU Leuven
The representation, evocation and suggestion of wind in the visual arts touches on fundamental ideas relating to the anthropology of the senses and their descent into the visual medium. Wind is a natural phenomenon that plays on the entire sensorium of the body. Wind is tactile. Wind can be heard. Wind carries scents. Wind is a cosmic breath that envelops and penetrates us. Wind nourishes or destroys.
Even our own bodies produce and inhale wind. The wind is related to the breath that exits and enters our bodies, even to the gases our organs emit. Wind is both the lower – the anal eruption – and the higher – the breath we need. But there is also a third “wind” in our body. In the Greek philosophy of Aristotle (384-322 BC), the concept of pneuma is central to both breath and spirit. It is the vital energy of life, literally, the “gas” that occupies the brain and is responsible for thought, perception and movement. One receives this vital energy at birth and each human being refreshes this energy continually by drawing breath.
approach. The Enclosed Garden Project 2014–2019 was supported by the Fund Baillet Latour of the King Baudouin Foundation, Belgium and received Brain Belspo Research Funding 2016–2020 for the ArtGarden Project: Research Enclosed Gardens and preventive conservation of Mixed-Media objects. The conservation project resulted in an exhibition in
2016: In Search of Utopia: Art and Science in the Era of Thomas More in Museum M, Leuven and a monograph; The Enclosed Gardens are on permanent display in Hof van Busleyden, Mechelen.
As a humanist, Galileo befriended many of the artists in his milieu. Thus,
his telescopic ‘eye’ came into contact with the actual eyes of contemporary
visual artists. Erwin Panofsky’s essay, “Galileo as a Critic of the Arts: Aesthetic
Attitude and Scientific, Thought” (1956), on Galileo’s friendship with Ludovico
Cigoli (1559–1613) and, more particularly, his advice for the Madonna of the
Immaculata Assunta in the dome of the Pauline chapel (1612) of Santa Maria
Maggiore (Rome). is a suitable starting point.*,1
Notes to Galileo’s Moon explores the tension between the human eye, the
lens, and the arts – one that was also fueled by the key debate of the era: the
paragone, or the hierarchical struggle between the artistic disciplines. I will
show how Galileo’s ‘scientific gaze’ was not distinct from a ‘painterly gaze.’ For
Galileo the telescope was more than a technical refinement for observation; it
was it was an optical prosthesis he used to reach for the artistic image through
contemplation.
Face à ce paradigme décidément insubmersible d’une histoire de l’art andro-scopo-centrée, Echo n’a jamais vraiment pu l’emporter. La nymphe demeure le « point aveugle » de l’Histoire de l’Art .
Aby Warburg refers to the Niobe motif’s Nachleben in his Tafel 5: Beraubte Mutter. (Niobe, Flucht und Schrecken). This displays the images of both the bereaved mother (Niobe) and the murderous mother (Medea). The montage also introduces the theme of the descent to the Underworld. It becomes clear how the cluster of motifs around the figure of Niobe— hybris, lamentatio and the chthonic substrate—functions as a direct entry to a bipolar hermeneutics of the visual medium: the “historical psychology of human expression” that navigates between Apollo and Dionysus. By extension we can consider how the Niobe motif is an externalization of the furthest boundaries of what human artistic expression can achieve: the unending tribute to love, but also the ceaseless struggle against death.
"Kon ik je maar anders schrijven, was ik maar iemand die anders schrijft. Al die wollige woorden. Eigenlijk had het ook erg simpel kunnen zijn, toch? Zoiets als: ‘Zeg het maar kind, waar doet het zeer?’ En ik doe mijn ogen heel stijf dicht en schrijf zo snel als ik kan: laat deze volstrekt vreemden de vreemdheid zelf verslaan, het machtige, gebiedende beginsel van de vreemdheid. (…) Ja, dat wil ik, dat je mijn mes bent, en ik zal het jouwe zijn, dat beloof ik, een scherp mes. Maar dan met meelij (sic), om met jou te spreken, ik wist niet eens dat dat word nog gebruikt mocht worden, zo teer en zacht van klank, een word zonder huid (als je het een paar keer achter elkaar hardop zegt, kun je daar iets van leem (sic) in voelen, harde en droge leemgrond op het moment dat water in de barsten begint door te sijpelen. Je bent moe, ik dwing mezelf om welterusten te zeggen”.
Jij bent mijn mes is een briefroman over een uniek emotioneel en narratief experiment. Yair voelt een onbestemde ontroering bij het zien van de rug en hals van een onbekende vrouw, Myriam. Yair zal nooit haar gezicht kennen, immers, uitsluitend in de onbekendheid van het gelaat kan hij haar mes zijn. Grossman beschouwt het mes als een literaire metafoor voor een intimiteit die uniek beleefd wordt in het lichaam van de taal. Het is het mes van de gelegenheid dat zich, aldus de auteur, bedient van een mysterieus tussenruimte: de zeldzame en precaire ‘opening van het bijna’. De opening van het bijna is de plaats waar de omwenteling onmiskenbaar radicaal wordt en het inzicht onontkoombaar en overrompelend.
Deze schok overkomt Yair.
De Antieken kenden een godheid voor het kantelmoment in de diachrone tijd: Kairós of de gelegenheidsgod.
Bij de van Eycks wordt het apocalyptische lam een unieke, indringende gedaante, begiftigd met een haast menselijke blik als van de Mensenzoon zelf. Eén detail van de lamsogen ontlenen de schilders echter aan de dierlijke soort zelf: de overdwarse pupil die de geiten, de schapen en de herten gegeven is. Als kwetsbare prooidieren biedt de horizontale pupil hen een groter breedte-zicht. Waar het waakzame lam van de gebroeders van Eyck allicht breder kan gade slaan dan de menselijke soort, daar spiegelt het lam Gods Zijn frontale blik met de eigentijdse toeschouwer, en ja, na al die eeuwen ook met u en ik.
and they have been pivotal in the many scholarly movements, or “turns”, attempting to
methodologically reframe the study of art history in general. Can you briefly explain which was
your original focus of interest and in which directions your scholarly approach developed over
the course of time?
In 2004, at the beginning of my academic career, I became involved in an interdisciplinary
research program on one verse: John 20, 17. The research team consisted of an exegete,
an anthropologist, and myself as an art historian. For me, the Noli me tangere project
was not only pars pro toto for a turn into the senses, but also led to the concept of Interspace.
Interspace concerns the “magnetic field” between word and image, or the methodical
translation of a literary corpus into the iconographic tradition. The insights from
this interdisciplinary collaboration, have given me the methodological resilience for the
follow-up projects on the iconography of the bleeding woman from Mark, and on the
context of the so-called Johannesschüssel.
These latter projects not only challenged the relationship between high & low material
culture, but also fundamentally questioned the original concept of Interspace once
again. Where iconography appeared to have no safety net in primary sources, and knowledge
of functions of textless phenomena remained “blind,” other approaches forced themselves
upon us.
support on fol. 157r of the Morgan Gospels, written and illuminated in Westphalia,
Germany during the mid-tenth century. On the basis of its formal properties and the
iconographic meaning it takes, I will give particular attention to the materiality of the
Latin text and its cultural and symbolic significance. The folio under study develops a
form of ‘agency’. With this perspective, I hope not only to contribute to the important
line of argument Joshua O’Driscoll develops in his iconic article, but also to explore
the meaning of Latin as an iconological statement and hence to contribute with new
methodological developments in the field of art history.
This brings me to the subject of this paper: ‘the now-time’. The Annunciation touches on a startling double paradox. The Incarnation continues to escape us due to its ‘visible invisibility,’ but also installs this mystery of the image in a split second, in a breach in time, as in Eliot’s the unattended Moment, the moment in and out of time. This is the Kairos or the ‘occasion time’: the interval between moments that holds potential. In the ‘now’ they turn into ‘pregnant moments’. Hence, in this essay I will revisit the Quattrocento iconography of the Annunciation from the standpoint of ‘Kairotic energy’. I will argue that by looking at the works of Sandro Botticelli (1444–1510) and Francesco del Cossa (1436-1478) the devotional interchange between image and beholder in this period is unlocked by pictorial (self-)reflection on the Incarnation as the ‘critical moment’.
and represents the unique chance to grasp, the «critical moment» for a certain action, the
fate that swiftly passes in order to change the course of (life)time. Indeed, «there are processes of
nature which, though determined in accordance with chronos, cannot be exhaustively understood
from the standpoint of chronos time. For in these processes, chronos attains to “critical points” and
thus begins to take on qualitative character»1. Kairos refers to a knowledge system that binds qualitative
time and space together in a knot so perfect that it provides the only possible occasion» or
«truth». The knot is «suitable» to grab when the moment is «right», that is why the term is also used
in ancient medical texts. If even one parameter of the intersection is missing, the moment becomes
unbalanced and the knot becomes unstable. In this first collection of aphorisms, written around
400 BC, Hippocrates (460-377 BC) says: «Life (bios) is short, and art (techne¯) long; the crisis (kairos)
is fleeting; experience is perilous, and decision is difficult. The physician must not only be prepared
to do what is right, but also to make the patient, the attendants, and externals cooperate»2 (fig. 1).
In this essay, I will explore the earliest traces of the Kairos concept in Early Christian Art. First, I
will focus on the dynamics between the Greek and Latin transformation in exegesis and texts. Second,
I discuss new iconographic examples and interpretations in for instance Coptic art3.
gehad op de kunsthistorische methode. Als Joodse émigré
uit Duitsland, en als de eerste kunsthistoricus aan het befaamde
Institute for Advanced Study te Princeton (1935), heeft hij het
vakgebied een onnavolgbaar statuut gegeven binnen de humane
wetenschappen. Onder andere ‘The History of Art as a Human -
istic Discipline’ (1938), Studies in Iconology. Humanistic
Themes in the Art of the Renaissance (1939), The Life and Art
of Albrecht Dürer (1943) en Gothic Architecture and Scho las -
ticism (1951) zijn nog steeds standaardwerken.
De impact van Erwin Panofsky op de mediëvistiek en bij uitbreiding
op de humane wetenschappen is onmiskenbaar. Zijn intellectuele
invloed is nog steeds prominent in het onderzoek naar de middeleeuwse
kunst en architectuur, de interpretatie van de symboliek in
de schilderkunst van de Vlaamse Primitieven en de receptie van de
Oudheid tijdens de Vroegmoderne Tijd. Zijn methode om kunst te
begrijpen op basis van visuele conventies, literaire tradities en culturele
topoi – iconologie genaamd – maakt deel uit van de twintigste
en eenentwintigste-eeuwse wetenschapsgeschiedenis.
In deze bijdrage wil ik ingaan op één welbepaald tijdsfragment
uit het leven en werk van Erwin Panofsky: zijn aankomst in de Ver -
enigde Staten tijdens de jaren dertig van de twintigste eeuw, en het
manifest dat hij schreef niet lang na zijn aanstelling in Princeton:
‘The History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline’.
In Mark’s plot the motif of dance and by extension of Salome demonstrate a peculiar spatial energy: the way in which Salome is placed in different rooms is confusing and seems flighty. It starts with verse 22, where the daughter comes in (cumque introisset filia ipsius). Then, in verse 24, when she has finished her dance and Herod’s oath has inescapably been made, she leaves the room and asks her mother for advice. Her mother then whispers the fatal demand into her ear (quae cum exisset dixit matri). In verse 25, the pace of the story picks up. Salome re-enters the room and immediately addresses the king with haste (cumque introisset statim cum festinatione). At this point, the events are interrupted by the beheading in the prison after which, in verse 28, the executioner gives the head to the girl, and the girl gives the head to the mother (et adtulit caput eius in disco et dedit illud puellae et puella dedit matri suae). The first transfer of the head, according to the context, happens in the hall where the party is held, while the second is suggested to have happened in a different room, since earlier, she had to leave to go see her mother. In short, she comes in, she leaves, she hastily goes in again, she receives the platter, she gives the platter to the mother.
The French literary critic René Girard (1923-2015) wrote a fascinating essay on the role of the dancing girl in Mark’s plot. The author develops the motif from the concept of “mimetic desire”. “Salome is a child. She has nothing to do with the dance of the seven veils and other orientalia,” writes Girard (Girard 1984, 311-324). The child imitates her mother’s wish and from the moment she is filled with this wish, the girl crosses a certain threshold. It is said in Mark that the girl hastens back (Cum festinatione), and immediately demands John’s head in disco. The acceleration reflects the intensification of the plot that will converge in what Girard calls “mimetic violence”. Girard writes: “At first she is a blank sheet of desire, then, in one instant, she shifts to the height of mimetic violence (Girard 1984, 314)”. This peculiar rite of passage enacts itself in an inevitable determination of moments: from the silent dance, to the king’s giving voice to the oath, to the mother’s wish fulfilled, culminating in the dazzling horror of a head on a platter offered during a banquet. In this essay I revisit the iconographic motif of the dancing girl from an interdisciplinary perspective involving exegesis, space, ritual performance and Pathosformeln.
boundaries and the river of the same name that originates there),
terminated in a vast dark pool called the Black Water. I was not allowed
to go there under any circumstances; it was a terrifying place where you could lose your way or, worse still, be dragged under. Besides, there was a legend that girls who ventured to the edge of the marsh would suffer misfortune in motherhood.
In the curse that clings to the Black Water resonates a deeper archetype
that casts the marsh as the sanctuary of the Mother Goddess. In this essay I attempt to open up this dark chthonic space. For it is on the brink of the abyss that humans discern the caverns of symbolic thought, and marvel at the infinite dark energy of motherhood in iconography and myth.
Salome from the biblical narrative, transforming her into a means of
showing what painting, when anchored in gaze, flesh, and death, is capable of.
Barbara Baert – KU Leuven
The representation, evocation and suggestion of wind in the visual arts touches on fundamental ideas relating to the anthropology of the senses and their descent into the visual medium. Wind is a natural phenomenon that plays on the entire sensorium of the body. Wind is tactile. Wind can be heard. Wind carries scents. Wind is a cosmic breath that envelops and penetrates us. Wind nourishes or destroys.
Even our own bodies produce and inhale wind. The wind is related to the breath that exits and enters our bodies, even to the gases our organs emit. Wind is both the lower – the anal eruption – and the higher – the breath we need. But there is also a third “wind” in our body. In the Greek philosophy of Aristotle (384-322 BC), the concept of pneuma is central to both breath and spirit. It is the vital energy of life, literally, the “gas” that occupies the brain and is responsible for thought, perception and movement. One receives this vital energy at birth and each human being refreshes this energy continually by drawing breath.
approach. The Enclosed Garden Project 2014–2019 was supported by the Fund Baillet Latour of the King Baudouin Foundation, Belgium and received Brain Belspo Research Funding 2016–2020 for the ArtGarden Project: Research Enclosed Gardens and preventive conservation of Mixed-Media objects. The conservation project resulted in an exhibition in
2016: In Search of Utopia: Art and Science in the Era of Thomas More in Museum M, Leuven and a monograph; The Enclosed Gardens are on permanent display in Hof van Busleyden, Mechelen.
As a humanist, Galileo befriended many of the artists in his milieu. Thus,
his telescopic ‘eye’ came into contact with the actual eyes of contemporary
visual artists. Erwin Panofsky’s essay, “Galileo as a Critic of the Arts: Aesthetic
Attitude and Scientific, Thought” (1956), on Galileo’s friendship with Ludovico
Cigoli (1559–1613) and, more particularly, his advice for the Madonna of the
Immaculata Assunta in the dome of the Pauline chapel (1612) of Santa Maria
Maggiore (Rome). is a suitable starting point.*,1
Notes to Galileo’s Moon explores the tension between the human eye, the
lens, and the arts – one that was also fueled by the key debate of the era: the
paragone, or the hierarchical struggle between the artistic disciplines. I will
show how Galileo’s ‘scientific gaze’ was not distinct from a ‘painterly gaze.’ For
Galileo the telescope was more than a technical refinement for observation; it
was it was an optical prosthesis he used to reach for the artistic image through
contemplation.
Face à ce paradigme décidément insubmersible d’une histoire de l’art andro-scopo-centrée, Echo n’a jamais vraiment pu l’emporter. La nymphe demeure le « point aveugle » de l’Histoire de l’Art .
Aby Warburg refers to the Niobe motif’s Nachleben in his Tafel 5: Beraubte Mutter. (Niobe, Flucht und Schrecken). This displays the images of both the bereaved mother (Niobe) and the murderous mother (Medea). The montage also introduces the theme of the descent to the Underworld. It becomes clear how the cluster of motifs around the figure of Niobe— hybris, lamentatio and the chthonic substrate—functions as a direct entry to a bipolar hermeneutics of the visual medium: the “historical psychology of human expression” that navigates between Apollo and Dionysus. By extension we can consider how the Niobe motif is an externalization of the furthest boundaries of what human artistic expression can achieve: the unending tribute to love, but also the ceaseless struggle against death.
"Kon ik je maar anders schrijven, was ik maar iemand die anders schrijft. Al die wollige woorden. Eigenlijk had het ook erg simpel kunnen zijn, toch? Zoiets als: ‘Zeg het maar kind, waar doet het zeer?’ En ik doe mijn ogen heel stijf dicht en schrijf zo snel als ik kan: laat deze volstrekt vreemden de vreemdheid zelf verslaan, het machtige, gebiedende beginsel van de vreemdheid. (…) Ja, dat wil ik, dat je mijn mes bent, en ik zal het jouwe zijn, dat beloof ik, een scherp mes. Maar dan met meelij (sic), om met jou te spreken, ik wist niet eens dat dat word nog gebruikt mocht worden, zo teer en zacht van klank, een word zonder huid (als je het een paar keer achter elkaar hardop zegt, kun je daar iets van leem (sic) in voelen, harde en droge leemgrond op het moment dat water in de barsten begint door te sijpelen. Je bent moe, ik dwing mezelf om welterusten te zeggen”.
Jij bent mijn mes is een briefroman over een uniek emotioneel en narratief experiment. Yair voelt een onbestemde ontroering bij het zien van de rug en hals van een onbekende vrouw, Myriam. Yair zal nooit haar gezicht kennen, immers, uitsluitend in de onbekendheid van het gelaat kan hij haar mes zijn. Grossman beschouwt het mes als een literaire metafoor voor een intimiteit die uniek beleefd wordt in het lichaam van de taal. Het is het mes van de gelegenheid dat zich, aldus de auteur, bedient van een mysterieus tussenruimte: de zeldzame en precaire ‘opening van het bijna’. De opening van het bijna is de plaats waar de omwenteling onmiskenbaar radicaal wordt en het inzicht onontkoombaar en overrompelend.
Deze schok overkomt Yair.
De Antieken kenden een godheid voor het kantelmoment in de diachrone tijd: Kairós of de gelegenheidsgod.
Bij de van Eycks wordt het apocalyptische lam een unieke, indringende gedaante, begiftigd met een haast menselijke blik als van de Mensenzoon zelf. Eén detail van de lamsogen ontlenen de schilders echter aan de dierlijke soort zelf: de overdwarse pupil die de geiten, de schapen en de herten gegeven is. Als kwetsbare prooidieren biedt de horizontale pupil hen een groter breedte-zicht. Waar het waakzame lam van de gebroeders van Eyck allicht breder kan gade slaan dan de menselijke soort, daar spiegelt het lam Gods Zijn frontale blik met de eigentijdse toeschouwer, en ja, na al die eeuwen ook met u en ik.
and they have been pivotal in the many scholarly movements, or “turns”, attempting to
methodologically reframe the study of art history in general. Can you briefly explain which was
your original focus of interest and in which directions your scholarly approach developed over
the course of time?
In 2004, at the beginning of my academic career, I became involved in an interdisciplinary
research program on one verse: John 20, 17. The research team consisted of an exegete,
an anthropologist, and myself as an art historian. For me, the Noli me tangere project
was not only pars pro toto for a turn into the senses, but also led to the concept of Interspace.
Interspace concerns the “magnetic field” between word and image, or the methodical
translation of a literary corpus into the iconographic tradition. The insights from
this interdisciplinary collaboration, have given me the methodological resilience for the
follow-up projects on the iconography of the bleeding woman from Mark, and on the
context of the so-called Johannesschüssel.
These latter projects not only challenged the relationship between high & low material
culture, but also fundamentally questioned the original concept of Interspace once
again. Where iconography appeared to have no safety net in primary sources, and knowledge
of functions of textless phenomena remained “blind,” other approaches forced themselves
upon us.
support on fol. 157r of the Morgan Gospels, written and illuminated in Westphalia,
Germany during the mid-tenth century. On the basis of its formal properties and the
iconographic meaning it takes, I will give particular attention to the materiality of the
Latin text and its cultural and symbolic significance. The folio under study develops a
form of ‘agency’. With this perspective, I hope not only to contribute to the important
line of argument Joshua O’Driscoll develops in his iconic article, but also to explore
the meaning of Latin as an iconological statement and hence to contribute with new
methodological developments in the field of art history.
This brings me to the subject of this paper: ‘the now-time’. The Annunciation touches on a startling double paradox. The Incarnation continues to escape us due to its ‘visible invisibility,’ but also installs this mystery of the image in a split second, in a breach in time, as in Eliot’s the unattended Moment, the moment in and out of time. This is the Kairos or the ‘occasion time’: the interval between moments that holds potential. In the ‘now’ they turn into ‘pregnant moments’. Hence, in this essay I will revisit the Quattrocento iconography of the Annunciation from the standpoint of ‘Kairotic energy’. I will argue that by looking at the works of Sandro Botticelli (1444–1510) and Francesco del Cossa (1436-1478) the devotional interchange between image and beholder in this period is unlocked by pictorial (self-)reflection on the Incarnation as the ‘critical moment’.
and represents the unique chance to grasp, the «critical moment» for a certain action, the
fate that swiftly passes in order to change the course of (life)time. Indeed, «there are processes of
nature which, though determined in accordance with chronos, cannot be exhaustively understood
from the standpoint of chronos time. For in these processes, chronos attains to “critical points” and
thus begins to take on qualitative character»1. Kairos refers to a knowledge system that binds qualitative
time and space together in a knot so perfect that it provides the only possible occasion» or
«truth». The knot is «suitable» to grab when the moment is «right», that is why the term is also used
in ancient medical texts. If even one parameter of the intersection is missing, the moment becomes
unbalanced and the knot becomes unstable. In this first collection of aphorisms, written around
400 BC, Hippocrates (460-377 BC) says: «Life (bios) is short, and art (techne¯) long; the crisis (kairos)
is fleeting; experience is perilous, and decision is difficult. The physician must not only be prepared
to do what is right, but also to make the patient, the attendants, and externals cooperate»2 (fig. 1).
In this essay, I will explore the earliest traces of the Kairos concept in Early Christian Art. First, I
will focus on the dynamics between the Greek and Latin transformation in exegesis and texts. Second,
I discuss new iconographic examples and interpretations in for instance Coptic art3.
gehad op de kunsthistorische methode. Als Joodse émigré
uit Duitsland, en als de eerste kunsthistoricus aan het befaamde
Institute for Advanced Study te Princeton (1935), heeft hij het
vakgebied een onnavolgbaar statuut gegeven binnen de humane
wetenschappen. Onder andere ‘The History of Art as a Human -
istic Discipline’ (1938), Studies in Iconology. Humanistic
Themes in the Art of the Renaissance (1939), The Life and Art
of Albrecht Dürer (1943) en Gothic Architecture and Scho las -
ticism (1951) zijn nog steeds standaardwerken.
De impact van Erwin Panofsky op de mediëvistiek en bij uitbreiding
op de humane wetenschappen is onmiskenbaar. Zijn intellectuele
invloed is nog steeds prominent in het onderzoek naar de middeleeuwse
kunst en architectuur, de interpretatie van de symboliek in
de schilderkunst van de Vlaamse Primitieven en de receptie van de
Oudheid tijdens de Vroegmoderne Tijd. Zijn methode om kunst te
begrijpen op basis van visuele conventies, literaire tradities en culturele
topoi – iconologie genaamd – maakt deel uit van de twintigste
en eenentwintigste-eeuwse wetenschapsgeschiedenis.
In deze bijdrage wil ik ingaan op één welbepaald tijdsfragment
uit het leven en werk van Erwin Panofsky: zijn aankomst in de Ver -
enigde Staten tijdens de jaren dertig van de twintigste eeuw, en het
manifest dat hij schreef niet lang na zijn aanstelling in Princeton:
‘The History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline’.
In Mark’s plot the motif of dance and by extension of Salome demonstrate a peculiar spatial energy: the way in which Salome is placed in different rooms is confusing and seems flighty. It starts with verse 22, where the daughter comes in (cumque introisset filia ipsius). Then, in verse 24, when she has finished her dance and Herod’s oath has inescapably been made, she leaves the room and asks her mother for advice. Her mother then whispers the fatal demand into her ear (quae cum exisset dixit matri). In verse 25, the pace of the story picks up. Salome re-enters the room and immediately addresses the king with haste (cumque introisset statim cum festinatione). At this point, the events are interrupted by the beheading in the prison after which, in verse 28, the executioner gives the head to the girl, and the girl gives the head to the mother (et adtulit caput eius in disco et dedit illud puellae et puella dedit matri suae). The first transfer of the head, according to the context, happens in the hall where the party is held, while the second is suggested to have happened in a different room, since earlier, she had to leave to go see her mother. In short, she comes in, she leaves, she hastily goes in again, she receives the platter, she gives the platter to the mother.
The French literary critic René Girard (1923-2015) wrote a fascinating essay on the role of the dancing girl in Mark’s plot. The author develops the motif from the concept of “mimetic desire”. “Salome is a child. She has nothing to do with the dance of the seven veils and other orientalia,” writes Girard (Girard 1984, 311-324). The child imitates her mother’s wish and from the moment she is filled with this wish, the girl crosses a certain threshold. It is said in Mark that the girl hastens back (Cum festinatione), and immediately demands John’s head in disco. The acceleration reflects the intensification of the plot that will converge in what Girard calls “mimetic violence”. Girard writes: “At first she is a blank sheet of desire, then, in one instant, she shifts to the height of mimetic violence (Girard 1984, 314)”. This peculiar rite of passage enacts itself in an inevitable determination of moments: from the silent dance, to the king’s giving voice to the oath, to the mother’s wish fulfilled, culminating in the dazzling horror of a head on a platter offered during a banquet. In this essay I revisit the iconographic motif of the dancing girl from an interdisciplinary perspective involving exegesis, space, ritual performance and Pathosformeln.
Part I treats the anthropological archetypes of the notion wind and breath in different religious systems. Special attention goes to the monotheistic wind(s), such as ruach, and their different meanings throughout the Bible. A particular problem in the study of the wind is furthermore the process of its translation first to pneuma and then to spiritus. Part I concludes with a typology of the effects of these meanings and translations upon Christian iconography.
Part II focuses mainly on the theme of the Annunciation. The author suggests that the mystery of the Incarnation was, in Quattrocento paintings in particular, charged with the senses as sublimation of the deeper metaphors of the wind. By integrating into the iconography the sensorium as both a complex and a chiasmic osmosis (for example seeing as hearing), a new sensuous relationship between image and beholder was established in which wind (and odour) was established as a new intellectual and humanistic mediator.
Part III treats the phantoms of the wind hidden in the corners of the previous chapters. Some of them embody time, others embody facets of the wind beyond the merely anthropomorphic world. In these final chapters the author touches the innermost hermeneutics of the wind, its deepest whirls. Among other themes, she treats the dancing nymph, Leonardo’s sfumato, Kairós’ rush, Arachne’s web and silence, the calm before the storm.
Sumpf Wassernixe by Paul Klee. A Feuilleton is designed for collectors and lovers of fine books (150ex.). Each copy is produced with exceptional attention to detail, fine paper, handcrafted binding, and exquisite typography. This limited-edition publication is numbered with a unique cover design. Therefor a text will not (yet) be available.
In haar gesprekken met de auteurs, biedt Barbara Baert troost en reflectie over wat kunst en literatuur vermag. Met haar milde blik, haar uitzonderlijk plastisch proza en haar associatief vermogen wekt Barbara Baert een uniek beeldenuniversum tot leven. Terugkerende thema’s zijn taal en emotie, hooghartigheid en paternalisme, de liefde en het lot, de kracht van het ‘nu’, de blik op de kosmos, de oude mythen, versmachting en bevrijding, de muzen en de mystici, de schuilplaats en de dood.
Brieven aan
Vivian Gornick Siri Histvedt Joke van Leeuwen
Stella Seitun Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven María Sanz de Sautuola Peter Verhelst Melanie De Biasio Fleur Jaeggy Tarjei Vesaas
Uniek is ook de keuze om zich in acht van de tien brieven tot een vrouw te richten. Samen met enkele rake uitspraken over paternalistische reflexen in de kunst- en academische wereld vormt deze basiskeuze een sterk statement. De sterkte ervan schuilt echter vooral in het feit dat Barbara Baert deze keuze niet thematiseert. Machtsverhoudingen doorbreek je niet alleen met protest, maar ook door er stilzwijgend andere evidenties tegenover te plaatsen (Nadia Lie).
All the artworks in this captivating book contribute to unravel the largest mystery that surrounds us: the cosmos. The image blooms into the countenance of that majestic, astonishing black pupil above us. Or as Aby Warburg once wrote: “Contemplation of the sky is the grace and the curse of humanity.”
Gossaert’s Danaë is a sophisticated articulation of outer and inner discourse: the hard, dry, background, with its eclectic architecture, in contrast with the sweltering, moist, foreground with the figure’s naked body. This essay develops Gossaert’s complex phantasmata surrounding architecture, decoration, and the female body in three spaces: the intimate space of impregnation, the psychosomatic space, and, third, the petrifying space of Medusa.
Barbara Baert writes:
“Danaë is the living emanation of painting as the uttermost exhibitionistic medium. Her unveiled skin fragile exposed in the midst of an overwhelming symphonic outburst of details, facades, windows. Danaë: martyr of glossy materials - marble and flesh - unable to disappear in her own skin; held hostage within a medium of walls. Her only desire is to disappear in the ultimate thin membrane, to vaporize beyond the harsh brocks and, then, at the very end, leave the medium of textile too. There were threads become drippings, lines become tears.”
Using the Mantua grisaille as starting point and leading motif, Barbara Baert guides us in her own intriguing way through the history of the representation of this figure in art.
How did the archaic Greek Kairos model survive in the Quattrocento? Which appearances did Kairos take on along the way and how can we explain his mutations?
The author shows us how the semantic and rhetorical expansion of the concept kairos/occasio brought about gender switches and conflations with other personifications of time and fate.
Grasping the lock of hair of Kairos/Occasio, spinning the wheel of fortune of Tyche/Fortuna, acting as the mast of the ship and holding the billowing sails, she steers us through depictions of the motionlessness of the moment throughout history before dropping anchor in the fascinating vocabulary of Aby Warburg.
During this journey, she invites us to go offshore looking for a new critical moment that presents itself as a powerful opening of possibilities.
This volume of Studies in Iconology contributes to the content and context of Panofsky’s essay “The History of Art as a Humanistic Discipline”, which functioned as a manifesto written by an intellectual émigré in the new American context that he was to explore, and in particular the humanistic studies milieu in Princeton. With respect to style and genre, the text is somewhat atypical for Panofsky’s oeuvre, and it sheds light on an interesting juncture in his reflection on the discipline of art history and its integration in the humanities. A close reading of the text and an analysis of its impact can still teach us something about the origins and development of the field today. Hence, this essay is neither a tribute nor a rehabilitation; it seeks only to shed light on a wrinkle in time that was caused by one text, which in fact started out as a lecture, and celebrates the origins, joy, and future of the humanities. In Panofsky’s own words, this joy can be expressed as follows:
It may be asked whether the interpretation of meaning (...) apart from satisfying our intellectual curiosity, also contributes to our enjoyment of works of art. I for one am inclined to maintain that it does. Modern psychology has taught us – or rather reminded us of what Thomas Aquinas [1225-1274] already knew – that the senses have their own kind of reason. It may well be that the intellect has its own kind of joys.
Even today, we use ‘enthusiasm’ to describe a special energy that can suddenly overwhelm us: an affect of rapture that radiates out towards the audience. Yet, through the ages, the concept has not always carried with it the positive connotations of the ancient Greeks. Along the way, enthusiasm and rapture became contaminated with (religious) fanaticism and even with manipulative deceit.
In his book Philosophie und Enthusiasmus, Bernd Bösel asks why we so often view enthusiasm as a suspicious affect in the modern-day intellectual context. He thinks the reason is found in the Zweikampf between enthusiasm and melancholy on the one hand, and enthusiasm and reason on the other. According to the author, the first conflict is situated on the vertical scheme of the mood, which holds the extremes of highs and lows, as with the pathological diagnoses of bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and even psychosis. The second conflict polarises enthusiasm with reason, making enthusiasm an emotion that hinders rational thought. In both positions, enthusiasm is not seen as part of a reliable epistemology. These splits gradually started to develop from the 17th century on, although enthousiasmos was revalued during the Age of Enlightenment and the Romantic Era as a positive stimulant of creativity and Ideenflucht.
Despite a few flickers on the cultural historical time line, enthusiasm has mostly been marginalised in modern Western philosophy: as an excessive urge, or as a harmful exaggeration of emotions that leads to madness. Bösel calls for rehabilitation of enthousiasmos as a knowledge paradigm that shouldn’t be seen as the opposite of melancholy genius, nor as Besonnenheit, but as something which deserves an intrinsic place in the cultural sciences: in the Zwischenreich des Begehrens und Fühlen.
The rehabilitation of enthousiasmos as a criticised affect of the mind also interests me from an iconological standpoint. Is enthousiasmos the subject of any iconographic traditions? Is enthousiasmos an aesthetic concept within the art historical method? Can enthousiasmos be a part of a visual epistemology? I will discuss these questions in three chapters: a case on Pentecost in Christian iconography; an analysis of the Pygmalion myth within the 18th-century sparks of creative passion, and a new interpretation of Aby Warburg’s (1866-1929) Pathosformel as a variant of the entheos paradigm.
And finally: Anne-Louise Germaine Necker or Madame de Staël (1766-1817) will join us on our journey. After all, her De l’Allemagne (1810) is an unparalleled defence of how enthusiasm, wisdom, and sensibility go together.
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“Art can speak to what falls outside theory, and it can also embody felt ideas.”
Siri Hustvedt, defending the integration of emotional patterns and affects in the art sciences in A Woman Looking at Men looking at Women.
The six chapters discuss the most fundamental themes in the Christian iconography and their depiction of spirituality and the sensorium: Pentecost, the Noli me tangere motif, the miracle of the bleeding woman and Mary Magdalene, the death of John the Baptist, the dancing Salome, and finally the role of the wind, movement, and the Holy Ghost in, amongst other things, the mystery of the Annunciation.
The reader is shown a medieval and early modern visual culture as a history of artistic solutions in the broader sense of the meaning, and thus as the fascinating approach between biblical texts, the plastic imagination, and the art-scientific métier. This makes the reader a privileged guest in a unique in-between space: there where humans and their artistic expression can meet existentially.
The sieve exhibits a wide range of symbolism that extends across art history, philosophy, anthropology, psychoanalysis, and gender stud-ies. About Sieves and Sieving provides an interdisciplinary perspective on the sieve from four methodological angles: motif, symbol, tech-nique, and paradigm. The sieve as motif goes back to Roman stories of the Vestal virgins. Later, their (impermeable) sieve was icono-graphically transferred to Elizabeth I (1533-1603) as a sign of her integrity. Furthermore, this essay explores the longue durée of the sieve as a symbolic-technical object of use by looking at examples from Jewish folklore, Berber culture, and ancient Egypt. This essay also involves two paradigmatic challenges. The first concerns its tectonics, and the second explores the sieve as moi-peau.
See excerpt Chapter 6 The sieve as Organism
This extraordinary glossary leverages the power of interdisciplinary research in art and human sciences, and invites the reader to consider the beauty of these disciplines by embracing multiple genres.
Fragments is Barbara Baert’s response to her being awarded the Belgian Francqui Prize Human Sciences 2016. This celebration book within the series Studies in Iconology is a token of gratitude and a sign of encouragement towards the desire of a deeper understanding of our artistic environments.
Every stain is unique.
In this essay the author deals with seven factors that make the stain into a powerful model for rethinking the visual: the stain as prototype and prefiguration, the stain as relic, the stain of Veronica, the stain as a psycho-energetic symptom, the stain as pars pro toto for the womb, the stain and le désir mimétique and finally the stain as an image paradigm of the residue.
HVIVS NYMPHA LOCI, SACRI CVSTODIA FONTIS,
DORMIO, DVM BLANDAE SENTIO MVRMVR AQVAE.
PARCE MEVM, QVISQVIS TANGIS CAVA MARMORA, SOMNVM
RVMPERE. SIVE BIBAS SIVE LAVERE TACE.
Many scholars have discussed the impact of the rumour as creating a prototype for Renaissance sculptures of the sleeping nymph in Rome and for the development of the well-known genre of the sleeping Venus in painting. Building upon the previous studies, this essay contextualizes the phenomenon of the sleeping nymph and its textual and artistic Nachleben from the point of view of the locus amoenus as silence. This study combines iconological, aesthetical-philosophical and anthropological approaches, and contributes to a better understanding of sleep, voyeurism, water and silence within the context of the nymph's particular genius loci.
The first part consists of nine contributions which cover textual interpretations of the Noli me tangere between the first and the 17th century. The studies of Reimund Bieringer, Outi Lehtipuu and Martijn Steegen offer exegetical analyses of John 20:17 and its literary context in the Gospel of John. Andrea Taschl-Erber, Ward De Pril & Anthony Dupont and Kevin Coyle offer analyses of the prohibition in early Christian and Patristic contexts. Greti Dinkova-Bruun investigates the reception of the Noli me tangere in the Middle Ages and Gergely Juhász in the early modern era. Jost Eickmeyer concludes this part with a study on the 16th and 17thcenturies.
The second part is spearheaded by Barbara Baert with a contribution on the relationship between the narrative and the iconic. Galit Noga Banai looks in her study for the earliest representations of the Noli me tangere in visual art. Britta Dümpelmann investigates the theme of “touching the untouchable” in the Easter liturgy and in art. Barbara Margarethe Eggert analyses medieval representations of the Noli me tangere on liturgical vestments. The study by Bram De Klerck focuses on the Mary Magdalene iconography in the age of Titian and Gaudenzio Ferrari. The late baroque period in Naples is the focus of the article by Ulrike Müller-Hofstede. Erin E. Benay concludes this section with an essay on the Noli me tangere in late Renaissance art.
The third part of this book on the Noli me tangere in contemporary interpretation opens with a text by Tina Beattie on the Noli me tangere in art and theology. Karlijn Demasure offers a practical-theological investigation on the Noli me tangere and child sexual abuse. Marc De Kesel contributed an essay on the Noli me tangere and the Shoa in the context of the monotheistic ban on images. The article by Katherine Rondou studies traces of the Noli me tangere in contemporary literature. Susan K. Roll focuses in her study on the “presence and touch of women in the Roman Catholic liturgy today. Finally Axel Liégeois studies physical touch in pastoral counseling, and Eileen Kerwin Jones investigates the “Untouchability of maternal mortality as a theological imagery.
“In its inter- and intra-disciplinary breadth this book could be seen as a window, a mirror and an icon. As a window, it opens up a perspective on the rich cultural and academic Wirkungsgeschichte the words of the Johannine Jesus in John 20:17, in particular in their Latin translation as Noli me tangere, have had. In this way it also documents a phase in the study of the subject. As a mirror, this book challenges the academic disciplines and in particular the scholars themselves by confronting them with their own social and historical location and the way this influences their own research. As an icon, this collection points beyond itself and reminds us that scholarship is not an island, but that in ever so implicit and indirect ways it is part of the human dream for a better world. This book is a witness to the ongoing ways in which the Noli me tangere in its Johannine context and beyond continues to create new meaning” (Introduction).
Since 1933, the Francqui Prize has been granted almost every year, successively in the fields of exact sciences, humanities, and biological and medical sciences. Being awarded also comes with the great honor of organizing one’s own celebratory symposium. Therefore, Baert envisioned Fragments and “The Right Moment: A Symposium on Kairotic Energies” as tokens of her gratitude and sings of encouragement towards the desire of a deeper understanding of our artistic environments.
Fragments is loosely conceptualized as a ‘glossary’. The volume consists of hundred-and-ten lemmata, from Acheiropoietos to Zwischenraum. Each lemma presents an encompassing explanation, a shorter experimental or even a poetic musing in order to circumscribe concepts and terms that frequently occur in the field of iconology, and Baert’s research specifically. Moreover, Fragments offers a unique anthology of her work as it is compiled entirely out of her writings.
The following article discusses the iconological research of prof. dr. Barbara Baert (Francquis Chair 2016) on the Pneuma, a motif that includes breath, wind, ruach, odour, stains, movement and silence. It is based on her latest publication Pneuma and the Visual Medium in the Middle Ages and Early Modernity. Essays on Wind, Ruach, Incarnation, Odour, Stains, Movement, Kairos, Web and Silence (Peeters, 2016), a book that is related to her broader iconological research. The author argues that the value of prof. Baert’s approach consists in inventing an iconological method where meaning emerges from its relation to the latent sen- sitive potential of artworks. Baert's method subtly integrates iconology into a phenomenology of all the senses, from smell to touch and hearing.
You can confirm your participation by registering on https://events.kikirpa.be/event/1/registrations/4/
“The Greek term kairós expresses an idea of ‘grasping the right moment’, which travelled through art, literature, and philosophy. And even today, it is central to debates over, for example, time management. Combining perspectives from classical reception studies and iconology, this ongoing project at KU Leuven (2017-2021) is about the reception of kairós in the visual medium from antiquity to the Renaissance. How was the notion of kairós visualized in images throughout time, from antiquity to the early modern era? And more specifically, how did text and image work together to transform the notion of kairós in various contexts?”
The attending speakers from Belgium, Germany, France, Israel, Croatia, The Netherlands, Romania, The United Kingdom, The United States, and Switzerland have not only been selected on the basis of their interdisciplinary skills in the field; but equally because of their distinctive contribution to the method of iconology and visual anthropology.
Many among them are key influencers on, among other things, the importance of the Humanities in terms of peace process work, ecology, and the relationship between Eastern and Western civilizations.
registration and info stephanie.heremans@kuleuven.be
The essays collected in this volume explore how and by what means, from antiquity to the present day, the notion of ‘the right moment’ has been defined, visualized, and experienced. The authors approach the subject from a range of disciplines and often work at the intersection of several of them, including the history of art and architecture, philosophy and art theory, classics and comparative literature, the history of religion and theology, and anthropology. In addition to scholarly exposés, the book contains a number of personal musings and artistic reflections on ‘the right moment’ in various forms and kinds of imagination – visual, literary, and philosophical.
The Right Moment originates in a festive symposium held at the Francqui Foundation in Brussels on 18 and 19 October 2018 in honour of Barbara Baert, Laureate of the 2016 Francqui Prize in Human Sciences. “The statue of καιρός lives,” Barbara Baert wrote, “and it lets its powers gently glow to the surface for those who recognize him. But for those who miss him, a sharp and bitter trail remains.”