Oil Painting and Property
50 questions available
Questions
What fundamental analogy does the book propose for oil painting in its relationship to ownership and the act of seeing?
View answer and explanationAccording to the text, the period of traditional oil painting, as an art form, is roughly set between which years?
View answer and explanationWhat quote from Lévi-Strauss is used to describe an outstandingly original feature of the art of Western civilization?
View answer and explanationHow does the chapter define the difference between a 'masterpiece' and an 'average work' within the tradition of oil painting?
View answer and explanationWhat is the special ability that the book claims distinguishes oil painting from any other form of painting?
View answer and explanationIn the analysis of Holbein's 'The Ambassadors', what is the significance of the distorted skull in the foreground?
View answer and explanationHow did oil painting celebrate wealth differently from earlier art traditions?
View answer and explanationWhat is the main contradiction the book identifies in average religious paintings from the oil painting tradition, using Mary Magdalene as an example?
View answer and explanationHow is William Blake presented as an exceptional case in relation to the oil painting tradition?
View answer and explanationWhat interpretation is given for the objects on the shelves in Holbein's 'The Ambassadors', such as the navigational instruments, globe, and hymn book?
View answer and explanationWhat is the described stance of the two ambassadors in Holbein's painting towards the viewer?
View answer and explanationThe conflict in painted public portraits is described as the need to see the subject from close-to and from afar simultaneously. What is the suggested analogy for this way of seeing?
View answer and explanationIn the context of oil painting genres, how are paintings of livestock, such as the 'Lincolnshire Ox', interpreted?
View answer and explanationWhat purpose did the highest category of oil painting, the history or mythological picture, serve for its spectator-owners?
View answer and explanationWhat was the stated purpose of the 'genre' picture, or picture of 'low life'?
View answer and explanationWhich category of oil painting is identified as the one to which the book's main argument about property applies least?
View answer and explanationFrom which genre of painting did the most significant innovations in the tradition of oil painting come, according to the text?
View answer and explanationIn the discussion of Gainsborough's 'Mr and Mrs Andrews', what does the author claim was one of the pleasures the portrait gave its subjects?
View answer and explanationHow does the author counter Professor Lawrence Gowing's argument that Mr and Mrs Andrews were engaged in the 'philosophic enjoyment of unperverted Nature'?
View answer and explanationInstead of a 'framed window open on to the world,' what alternative model does the author propose for the European oil painting?
View answer and explanationAccording to the text, why are exceptional artists like Rembrandt or Vermeer acclaimed as the tradition's supreme representatives, despite producing work diametrically opposed to its values?
View answer and explanationWhat does the stereotype of 'the great artist' that emerged from the oil painting tradition entail?
View answer and explanationHow does the book interpret Rembrandt's 1634 painting 'Portrait of Himself and Saskia'?
View answer and explanationIn contrast to his earlier work, how is Rembrandt's later self-portrait described?
View answer and explanationThe chapter argues that oil painting did to appearances what capital did to social relations. What does this mean?
View answer and explanationWhat is the consequence of the huge number of oil paintings produced, in terms of the visitor's experience in an art museum?
View answer and explanationWhat does the text claim is the defining characteristic of 'hack work' in the oil painting tradition?
View answer and explanationWhat is the primary function of paintings of food, such as 'Still Life with a Lobster'?
View answer and explanationWhat does the text say about the depiction of the sitter's face in formal portraits as the tradition continued?
View answer and explanationThe book claims the prestige and emptiness of mythological paintings were directly connected. Why was this?
View answer and explanationWhat factor does the text identify as the cause for the 'stiff and rigid' appearance of the average painted public portrait?
View answer and explanationWho is presented as the only exceptional 'genre' painter, whose work precludes sentimental moralizing?
View answer and explanationWhat two reassuring things do pictures of the smiling poor, such as those by Hals, assert to the better-off viewer?
View answer and explanationWhy did the first pure landscapes painted in seventeenth-century Holland answer 'no direct social need,' according to the text?
View answer and explanationWhy does the author accuse the cultural history we are normally taught of 'disingenuousness' in its analysis of works like Gainsborough's 'Mr and Mrs Andrews'?
View answer and explanationWhat accusation does the author anticipate from the 'Cultural Establishment' in response to the book's analysis?
View answer and explanationWhat was the struggle of an exceptional painter who was dissatisfied with painting's limited role as a celebration of material property?
View answer and explanationThe end of the period of the traditional oil painting was marked by its displacement as the principal source of visual imagery by what?
View answer and explanationWhat is the key difference, according to the chapter, between the way an 'average work' and an 'exceptional work' were produced in the oil painting tradition?
View answer and explanationThe tradition of oil painting still forms many of our cultural assumptions. What specific assumption does the text say it defines?
View answer and explanationWhat does the text suggest about the symbolism of objects in a painting like 'Vanitas' by de Poorter, where a skull is included?
View answer and explanationThe text claims that in Holbein's 'The Ambassadors', every square inch of the surface appeals to what sense?
View answer and explanationWhat conclusion does the author draw from the fact that exceptional artists like Turner or Goya had 'no followers but only superficial imitators'?
View answer and explanationWhen did oil painting as an art form fully establish its own norms and way of seeing?
View answer and explanationThe relationship between art and market is identified as key to understanding the contrast between exceptional and average work. What historical development in the art market corresponds with the period of oil painting?
View answer and explanationIn the analysis of mythological paintings like Reynolds's 'Graces Decorating Hymen', how does the text describe the function of the 'classic guise'?
View answer and explanationWhat does the final stage of development in the generalized portrait sitter's face, the 'mask which went with the costume,' lead to in the modern day?
View answer and explanationWhy must an exceptional painter, single-handed, 'contest the norms of the art that had formed him'?
View answer and explanationWhat is the reason given for the failure of art history to come to terms with the relationship between outstanding and average works?
View answer and explanationHow did the tradition of oil painting supply archetypes for 'artistic genius'?
View answer and explanation