ART HISTORY
WRITING GUIDE
Read the Topic | Look at the Objects
| Choices
Questions to Ask of... Painting |
Architecture | Sculpture
Organization | The Thesis |
Logical Progression |
Categorizing | Comments
For another source on art history
writing, the Writing Workshop has a copy of Sylvan Bamet's A Short Guide
to Writing About Art which is very helpful.
Read the Topic
The first step to writing an art
history paper -- or any paper, for that matter -- is to read the topic
very carefully. What kind of analysis does it ask you to make? If
you are asked to write about a specific time and place, make sure that
the objects you write about were made in that time and place. If you are
asked to write about "art" in Florence from 1500-1520, remember that "art"
refers to painting, sculpture and architecture.
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Look at the Objects
The next step is to look very hard
at the objects that you are writing about. If at all possible, find
and stare at the original work. There is really no substitute, and
New York is only two hours away. If you can't do this, go
to the Art Library and find not just one but numerous large, color photos
of the work, from different angles. To write effectively about any
work of art, you absolutely have to know it inside and out.
If you have done a lot of reading
and engaged in a lot of discussion about a work of art, it can be dangerously tempting to write a
paper about it without actually looking at it. Be aware of
this and instead base your analysis on what YOU see in the objects.
Use the reading only to support what you find.
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Choices
The fundamental basis of your inquiry
is to explain the choices made by the artist in the presentation of the
work and then to analyze the effects of these choices on the viewer, in
historical context. Given numerous options, why did they do it the
way they did?
Ask yourself the following questions
of the work and then consider how the answers might contribute to your
paper. If you can answer these questions, you have a lot of information
to use in your paper.
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Questions to Ask of Painting
-
What is the subject? Is it religious, secular, mythological, or historical? How
does the title relate to the subject? (Keep in mind that in many cases paintings were not titled
by the original artists.)
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Can you identify a system of lines in
the painting? In other words, are diagonal, vertical or horizontal lines
painted or suggested?
-
What sort of pictorial space is used?
Is it deep or shallow? Did the painter use linear or atmospheric perspective,
or foreshortening? Do the perspective lines point to something in the picture?
-
Is the color realistic, expressionistic,
or symbolic? In other words, does the color look "real?" Is color used
to emphasize a certain feature of the painting or to structure the composition
in any way?
-
How big is it?
-
How is light used? Does it appear artificial?
What is the apparent source of light, and what does it emphasize?
-
How are the human figures related to one another? Do they link with each other
or contrast, are they active or passive? Who are the most important figures? Follow their eyes and see
where they look. Do they look out at the viewer, or do their eyes point
to a significant object or person? Are they all the same size? Are they
in proportion? Who are they? If they are portraits, are they idealized
or naturalistic?
-
Are the figures set in architecture
or landscape? What is their relation to the background?
-
What is the medium? What type of paints
were used on what type of surface?
-
What is its architectural context?
-
Is it part of a cycle of paintings?
-
Who was the patron? Under what circumstances?
-
Does the contemporary image represent
the original appearance of the painting, or does the original appearance
need to be mentally constructed?
-
What type of work is it? Does it conform
to a tradition within that type? (For example, if it is an altarpiece,
does it conform to established altarpiece traditions?)
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Questions to Ask of Architecture
-
How does it shape space? How is the
plan arranged in terms of entrance, movements, or uses?
-
How do spaces relate to other spaces?
-
How does one perceive the structure
and mass, of the building? How are they manipulated, disguised, or emphasized?
-
Think of yourself in the space. How
does the building move you physically through space?
-
What does the plan tell you about spatial
organization and movement?
-
How is it lit? (Keep in mind that
the lighting in modern photos is potentially artificial.)
-
Is the building inviting?
-
What is the building's function? Does
its form reveal its function?
-
What are the materials? How are they
decorated?
-
Who is the patron?
-
Does it express propaganda through symbols
of rulership?
-
Does it replace a significant previous
building on the same site?
-
How does it compare with surrounding
buildings, for example in size, style, and materials? How does it relate
to nature?
-
What tradition does it come out of?
Does it conform to that tradition?
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Questions to Ask of Sculpture
-
How does the sculpture treat volume
and mass?
-
Imagine yourself in the sculpture's
space. How does it relate to the space in which it exists?
-
What sort of negative space does the
sculpture create? (Negative space is the space surrounding the sculpture,
as opposed to the positive space created by the sculpture itself.)
-
If the sculpture is figural, what is
the effect of the pose?
-
If the sculpture is figural, what is
its scale in relation to actual human size? How does it function in your
space as another human being?
-
What is the effect of the drapery, if
any?
-
What geometric shapes can you find within
the sculpture?
-
Does the appearance change as you move
around the sculpture?
-
What effect does color or whiteness
have?
-
What are the materials?
-
What is the site? Does it have a specific
architectural framework within that site?
-
For what purpose was the sculpture made?
-
Who is the patron?
-
What tradition does it come out of?
Does it conform to that tradition?
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Organize the Paper
Once you have assembled enough information
about the work in question, organize your paper into an outline. If you
are writing a comparison between two works of art, choose either a point
by point or a whole by whole comparison. In the first, each paragraph should
compare the two works on a specific point, such as the use of linear perspective
in the two paintings. In the second, discuss the first work in its entirety
and then the second work in its entirety, and then tie them back together
in the conclusion.
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The Thesis Statement
In Art History papers you are not
always given the opportunity to develop an original thesis which delves
deeply into a specific problem. When you are asked to compare two
churches on an exam, for example, you need a broad thesis that covers a
lot of information. But make sure that your thesis answers the question
of the essay. Don't leave the reader in suspense, but state your purpose
in the first paragraph.
Begin each paragraph with a topic
sentence that supports the thesis. The paragraph should follow the topic
sentence, asserting its validity using specific examples. Try to obtain
your specific examples as much as possible from looking at the works of
art themselves and try to describe these specifics with as precise a vocabulary
as possible. For example, if your topic sentence is "church A breaks from
tradition in its form, while church B uses traditional forms," use precise
terms such as apse, nave, and choir for discussing the forms of the churches.
These terms can be found in your handouts, and in the glossary of Janson's
History of Art.
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Maintain a Logical Progression
Make sure you keep a logical progression
to your arguments. Describe the elements of the work of art you are analyzing
before you discuss their meaning. When you make the conclusion, for example,
that the contrapposto pose of Michelangelo's David recalls antiquity, a
clear way to present your argument would be:
1. Michelangelo's David
is depicted in a contrapposto pose.
2. In the Renaissance, contrapposto
poses were thought of as a distinctive feature of antique sculpture.
3. Therefore, David recalls antiquity.
This pattern first establishes a specific
formal element of the work of art, the contrapposto pose. Why do you say
that the pose is contrapposto? Point to specific aspects of the work of
art which lead you to make conclusions about it. Then link the contrapposto
pose with antiquity. Only then can you logically establish that the specific
work of art recalls antiquity. It might be a good idea to write out your
analogies in a simple form like the example above, and examine your argument
carefully. It is very important that you support your arguments with specific
elements found in the work of art itself. Avoid the verbs "seems" and "appears".
As a writer, you should always be able to prove your arguments with concrete,
specific examples. Can you find specific aspects of the work which prove
your statements? Are all of the statements valid? Pay close attention to
the second assertion in particular; this one seems to make a broad generalization.
Is it true?
You should also be very careful using
vague terms like "classical," and "renaissance" without being totally clear
on what you mean and suporting it to the teeth. In and of themselves,
these terms mean nothing.
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Categorize Information
It is a good idea when you are writing
about art to keep your ideas separated into categories. The categories
might include:
Form
Materials and technique
Content
Context (including patronage and
site)
It is impossible to write about these
categories in complete isolation from one another, but by thinking in terms
of these categories, you might be able to organize your paper around them.
You will also be more specific in your observations about the work of art.
For example, you write that "Gentile da Fabriano's Adoration of the Magi
asserts its patron's political and social power in the city of Florence."
Certainly this painting's form, its materials, its content, its technique,
and its site all work simultaneously to express power, but an essay could
analyze each element in isolation. It could be organized into sections,
one for each of these five categories. If, in fact, the content did not express
political power, your essay could discuss why it did not. Perhaps the patrons
were trying to hide their intentions, and did not want an expressly aggrandizing
content. Certainly there are other categories under which your information
could fall, the suggested categories are meant only as possible ones that
might lead you to think of others.
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Look at the Comments
Once the professors have returned
your paper with comments, read the comments carefully. Learn from your
mistakes and from your successes.
Good luck.
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