Giebelhausen, Michaela (2020) Page, Canvas, Wall: Visualising the History of Art. FNG Research (4/2020). pp. 1-14. ISSN 2343-0850
Type of Research: | Article |
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Creators: | Giebelhausen, Michaela |
Description: | In 1909, the Italian poet and founder of the Futurist movement, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti famously declared, ‘[w]e will destroy the museums, libraries, academies of every kind’.1 He compared museums to cemeteries, ‘[i]dentical, surely, in the sinister promiscuity of so many bodies unknown to one another… where one lies forever beside hated or unknown beings’. This comparison of the museum with the cemetery has often been cited as an indication of the Futurists’ radical rejection of traditional institutions. It certainly made these institutions look dead. With habitual hyperbole Marinetti claimed: ‘We stand on the last promontory of the centuries!… Why should we look back […]? Time and Space died yesterday.’ The brutal breathlessness of Futurist thinking rejected all notions of a history of art. This essay considers how the history of art, embodied in art-historical canons, schools, periods, and aesthetic standards, has been conceptualised through writing, the organisation of collections, and the decoration of new museum buildings. It examines some of the moments in which the page, the canvas and the wall offer seminal and selective visualisations of the history of art and deploy notions of time and space that are complex and contradictory, and far from dead. |
Official Website: | https://research.fng.fi/ |
Publisher/Broadcaster/Company: | Atenaeum, Helsinki, Finland |
Your affiliations with UAL: | Colleges > Central Saint Martins |
Date: | 23 July 2020 |
Digital Object Identifier: | https://fngresearch.files.wordpress.com/2020/07/fngr_2020-4_giebelhausen_michaela_article1.pdf |
Date Deposited: | 06 Aug 2020 08:45 |
Last Modified: | 09 Nov 2023 04:47 |
Item ID: | 15882 |
URI: | https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/15882 |
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