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Daniel Arasse

Personal Information

Born January 1, 1944
Died January 1, 2003 (59 years old)
Algiers, France
Also known as: DANIEL ARASSE, Arasse Daniel
19 books
5.0 (1)
13 readers

Description

Französischer Kunsthistoriker

Books

Newest First

Vermeer, faith in painting

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Through a historical analysis of Vermeer's method of production and a close reading of his art, Daniel Arasse explores the originality of this artist in the context of seventeenth-century Dutch painting. Arguing that Vermeer was not a painter in the conventional, commercial sense of his Dutch colleagues, Arasse suggests that his confrontaton with painting represented a very personal and ambitious effort to define a new pictorial practice within the classical tradition of his art. By examining Vermeer's approach to image-making, the author finds that his works demonstrate the concept of painting as a medium through which the viewer senses the ungraspable and mysterious presence of life. Not only does this concept of painting carry on the traditions of Classical Antiquity and the High Renaissance, but it also relates to Catholic ideas about spiritual meditation and the power of images . Arasse shows that although Vermeer usually uses secular subject matter commonplace among his contemporaries, his treatment of iconography, light, and line, for example, varies greatly from theirs. Iconographical elements tend to hold meaning in suspense rather than to explicate; dazzling light emanates from interior objects; sfumato renders the presence of objects without depicting them. Discussing these and other aspects of Vermeer's art, Arasse locates the painter's genius in the reflexive, meditative nature of his works, each of which seems to be a painting about painting. From these perspectives Arasse brings new insight in particular to two paintings that have long puzzled scholars: The Art of Painting and Allegory of Faith

The guillotine and the terror

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Translated from the French.

Léonard de Vinci

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Serge Bramly's biography of Leonardo da Vinci, first published to great critical and popular success in France, seeks to reveal the man behind the legend.--[book jacket].

Le sujet dans le tableau : Essais d'iconographie analytique

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La question de l'intimité du rapport entre les oeuvres et leurs auteurs ou commanditaires se pose, à la Renaissance, de manière décisive : l'expression individuelle de l'artiste devient en effet à cette époque un facteur reconnu - et apprécié dans la genèse et la forme des oeuvres d'art. "Le Sujet dans le tableau" propose sept études de cas où un emploi analytique de l'iconographie permet de distinguer comment, en s'appropriant le sujet (manifeste) de son oeuvre par le trouble qu'il introduit dans son énoncé, l'artiste ou le commanditaire y marque sa présence comme celle du sujet (latent) de son énonciation. Qu'en a-t-il été de Michel-Ange et de son Moise ?, de Titien dans son Allégorie de la Prudence ?, de Giovanni Bellini dans sa Dérision de Noé ?, mais aussi de Mantegna dans ses signatures ou du prince Frédéric de Montefeltro dans le désordre du Studiolo d'Urbino ? Un champ s'ouvre à l'analyse et à l'interprétation historiques : celui des investissements psychiques ou autres dont les oeuvres de la Renaissance ont été le lieu. Publiée en grand format pour la première fois, cette édition en couleurs, enrichie de nombreuses images, permet d'apprécier en détail les traces les plus ténues de la personnalité de quelques génies artistiques de la Renaissance.--

Take a Closer Look

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"What happens when we look at a painting? What do we think about? What do we imagine? How can we explain, even to ourselves, what we see or think we see? And how can art historians interpret with any seriousness what they observe? In six engaging, short narrative "fictions," each richly illustrated in color, Daniel Arasse, one of the most brilliant art historians of our time, cleverly and gracefully guides readers through a variety of adventures in seeing, from Velázquez to Titian, Bruegel to Tintoretto. By demonstrating that we don't really see what these paintings are trying to show us, Arasse makes it clear that we need to take a closer look. In chapters that each have a different form, including a letter, an interview, and an animated conversation with a colleague, the book explores how these pictures teach us about ways of seeing across the centuries. In the process, Arasse freshly lays bare the dazzling power of painting. Fast-paced and full of humor as well as insight, this is a book for anyone who cares about really looking at, seeing, and understanding paintings." -- Publisher's description.